| Literature DB >> 22279387 |
Olugbenga O Oludiran1, Victor J Ekanem.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cutaneous horns are hard, yellowish gray cornified skin growths. They are more common in white races and believed to be rare in Africans. There are few case reports of the lesion in African populations in the English literature.Entities:
Keywords: Cornu cutaneum; cutaneous horns; horns; squamous cell carcinoma
Year: 2011 PMID: 22279387 PMCID: PMC3263132 DOI: 10.4103/0974-2077.91253
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cutan Aesthet Surg ISSN: 0974-2077
Figure 1Cutaneous horn on the scalp of a 62-year-old man. The base of the lesion was a squamous cell carcinoma
Figure 2Cutaneous horn showing hyperkeratosis, parakeratosis, prominent rete pegs, and prominent mitotic figures with dermal invasion
Figure 3Yellowish gray horn arising from the eponychium of the big toe
Figure 4Kaposi sarcoma: Malignant neoplastic lesions with spindle shaped cells infiltrate in the dermis separated by slit like spaces filled with red blood cells
Figure 5Eccrine poroma: Section of the skin showing a lesion composed of relatively uniform basaloid cells that are arranged in nodules and columns extending from the epidermis to the dermis
Figure 6Horn on the extensor surface of the forearm