Benign migratory glossitis, or geographic tongue, is usually an asymptomatic inflammatory disorder of unknown etiology that affects the epithelium of the tongue. Local loss of filiform papillae leads to ulcer-like lesions that rapidly change the color and size. Histopathologic findings parallel the clinical appearance, and may have a psoriasiform pattern.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe present a 72-year-old man with a subungual amelanotic malignant melanoma (MM) on the right first toe with numerous local nodular metastases after trauma and without regional lymph node involvement. Most of the lesions were angiomatous (reddish blue), and some had a hyperkeratotic surface, clinically resembling Kaposi sarcoma. Results of biopsies performed on skin taken from the toe and from a metastatic lesion of the tibia revealed a classic case of amelanotic MM.
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