Advanced Search
Search
Diagnosis
Pigmentation
Color
Body Site
Age
Author
Morphology
Pattern
Organization
Category
Close
Search

Contributor

Tim Monahan, MD

Diagnosis

nephrogenic fibrosing dermopathy

Body Site

leg foot ankle

Age

0

Pigmentation

dark

Organization

confluent

Color

skin color pink brown

Morphology

fibrosis (scar, increased collagen)

Pattern

acral (centripetal - extremity predominant)

Comments

Nephrogenic fibrosing dermopathy (NFD) is a scleroderma-like fibrosing disorder that develops in the setting of renal insufficiency. The first cases of NFD were identified in 1997. Since then, hundreds of cases have been identified. Most affected patients have been adults but several pediatric cases have now been reported. Although the cause of NFD is unknown, initial observations suggest that cells involved in wound repair and tissue remodeling may be aberrantly recruited in the absence of overt traumatic tissue injury.

Description

Under a normal epidermis there is dense dermal fibrosis with a proliferation of fibroblasts which extends to the dermal-subcutaneous junction. There is a sparse perivascular lymphocytic infiltrate, and increased dermal mucin was demonstrated by colloidal iron stain.

Categories

Metabolic disorders cutaneous sign of systemic disease renal disease

Image Added

12/19/2004 18:35:03

Translate

Other Resources

PubMed Medline Plus Medscape

Image Options

Share