| Literature DB >> 28241848 |
Stéphane Vignes1, Robert Baran2.
Abstract
Yellow nail syndrome (YNS; OMIM 153300, ORPHA662) is a very rare disorder that almost always occurs after 50 years of age but a juvenile or familial form has also been observed. YNS is diagnosed based on a triad associating yellow nail discoloration, pulmonary manifestations (chronic cough, bronchiectasia, pleural effusion) and lower limb lymphedema. Chronic sinusitis is frequently associated with the triad. YNS etiology remains unknown but a role of lymphatic impairment is usually evoked. YNS is more frequently isolated but may be associated in rare cases with autoimmune diseases, other clinical manifestations implicating lymphatic functions or cancer and, hence, is also considered a paraneoplastic syndrome. YNS management is symptomatic and not codified. YNS can resolve spontaneously. Oral vitamin E alone or even better when associated with triazole antifungals may achieve partial or total disappearance of nail discoloration. Pleural effusion can be treated surgically, with decortication/pleurectomy or pleurodesis. Antibiotic prophylaxis is prescribed for bronchiectasia with chronic sputum production. Lymphedema treatment is based on low-stretch bandages and the wearing of elastic compression garments combined with skin care, exercises and, as needed, manual lymph drainage.Entities:
Keywords: Lymphedema; Respiratory manifestations; Review; Sinusitis; Yellow nail syndrome
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28241848 PMCID: PMC5327582 DOI: 10.1186/s13023-017-0594-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
YNS clinical manifestations found in six large series of patients
| Manifestation | Maldonado et al. [ | Hoque et al. [ | Piraccini et al. [ | Nordkild et al. [ | Varney et al. [ | Pavlidakey et al. [ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yellow nails, | 41 (100) | 10 (91) | 21 (100) | 86 (89) | 17 (100) | 53 (85) |
| Chronic pulmonary manifestations, | 23 (56) | 7 (64) | 15 (71) | 61 (63) | 17 (100) | 24 (39) (PEs only) |
| Lymphedema, | 26 (63) | 6 (55) | 6 (29) | 78 (80) | 13 (76) | 45 (72) |
| Sinusitis, | 17 (41) | 3 (27) | 3 (14) | NR | 14 (83) | 11 (18) |
| Complete triad | ~60% | 27% | 29% | NR | 76% | 27% |
PEs pleural effusions, NR not reported
Fig. 1Yellowing of all 10 (a) finger and (b) toe nails
Fig. 2Bilateral lower limb lymphedema involving the feet, ankles and calves, with accentuation of the flexion folds
Fig. 3Sinus computed-tomography scan: note the subtotal opacity of the left maxillary sinus and ethmoidal sinusitis
Fig. 4Lower-limb lymphoscintigraphy images were obtained 40 min after injecting 99mtechnetium-labeled colloidal albumin into two patients with the complete YNS triad: moderate lymphostasis and slightly decreased (a) or absent (b) inguinal lymph-node uptake
Rare, usually work-related, local toxic causes of yellow nail discoloration, from [90]
| Epoxy systems: metaphenylenediamine, 4,4′-methylenedianiline |
| Flower handling |
| Pesticides: diquat, paraquat, dinitroorthocresol, dinobuton |
| Chromium salts |
| Dyestuffs: dinitrosalicylic acid, dinitrobenzene, dinitrotoluene, trinitrotoluene |