Publications by authors named "A H Kint"

The electron microscopic findings in the onychomatricoma are described. In the proximal zone of the onychomatricoma, basal cells have various aspects, some being lacunar while others have only a limited cytoplasmic rim containing mitochondria and tonofilaments. In the parakeratotic cell columns the cells elongate and homogenized tonofilaments appear.

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[Dermatology in current medicine].

Verh K Acad Geneeskd Belg

July 1997

Dermatology evolved in the second part of the last century as a branch of internal medicine and was for many years confined to morphologic descriptions. Skin diseases are common and vary enormously in severity. Although most of the conditions are not life threatening, many of them are debilitating due to functional loss, pain and itch, and the social problems they cause.

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Pretibial epidermolysis bullosa is a rare form of dominant dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa. The disease was diagnosed after considerable delay in a large Belgian family and was remarkable for its late age at onset and its misleading clinical presentation in the proband, which strongly resembled keratosis lichenoides chronica. Both recessively and dominantly inherited forms of dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa have been shown to be linked to the collagen type VII gene, COL7A1.

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Background: The Bazex-Dupré-Christol syndrome is characterized by follicular atrophoderma, congenital hypotrichosis, and basal cell neoformations that include basal cell carcinomas and basal cell nevi.

Observations: We describe a large family in which 20 persons across four generations present with typical features of the Bazex-Dupré-Christol syndrome. However, the clinical picture in this family differs with regard to gender and age.

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