Publications by authors named "Witheiler D"

Esophageal involvement of lichen planus is an under-reported and under-diagnosed manifestation that should prompt immediate treatment given its high rate of complications. We highlight a rare case of a 62-year-old Caucasian woman with history of known oral lichen planus and esophageal strictures presumed to be secondary to gastroesophageal reflux disease, that presented with esophageal food impaction resulting in perforation and subsequent pneumomediastinum after esophagogastroduodenoscopy (EGD). Further workup, including a repeat EGD, revealed that the esophageal strictures were rather a complication of lichen planus.

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A blue nevus-like melanoma is a rare melanoma variant arising from or histologically similar to a blue nevus. It can be challenging to distinguish a cellular blue nevus from a blue nevus-like melanoma, particularly in cases of blue nevus-like melanoma lacking a transition from a clearly benign component. We present a case of a 78-year-old man who refused treatment for a previously existing melanoma and subsequently developed a gray nodule near the site of the previous melanoma.

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Bullous lesions in patients with end-stage renal disease are uncommon and can pose diagnostic and therapeutic challenges. We present a female patient with end-stage renal disease, bullous skin lesions affecting mainly sun-exposed areas, and high ferritin levels. She also had hepatitis C.

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Oral nodular fasciitis (NF) is a rare benign entity of significant clinical importance, which presents as a rapidly growing soft tissue mass. Awareness of this entity is essential, because histologically it resembles a malignancy at first glance, owing to its spindled histological nature and numerous typical mitoses. Thus, it is often misdiagnosed as an aggressive sarcoma, resulting in unnecessary radical surgery.

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Ectoparasitic infestations are common cutaneous problems. The vast majority of these are attributable to scabies and pediculosis. While these are usually readily recognizable, infestations caused by other ectoparasites, such as nonscabetic mites, may pose difficulty in diagnosis.

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Background: Few studies have examined the long-term efficacy of fluorouracil (FU) or chemical peels for the treatment of actinic keratoses (AK). Our earlier work examined the efficacy and safety of a medium-depth chemical peel compared with the standard regimen of topical FU in the treatment of widespread facial AK through 12 months.

Objectives: To determine long-term efficacy of both treatments by extending our observations through 32 months.

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Although most examples of cutaneous malignant melanoma are easily recognized by their clinical appearances, in some cases this serious neoplasm may clinically simulate other less serious forms of skin cancer or benign processes. This study was undertaken to assess both the sensitivity of clinical diagnosis of cutaneous malignant melanoma and the efficacy of biopsies of clinically unsuspected melanomas in yielding specimens on which complete and accurate histologic assessments could be made. A retrospective analysis of 1784 cases of histologically proven melanomas diagnosed between 1985 and 1990 was performed in search of lesions not clinically suspected.

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The purpose of this study was to assess the sensitivity of clinical diagnosis of cutaneous malignant melanoma and to evaluate histologic characteristics of lesions not clinically diagnosed as such. Of 1,784 cases of histologically proven cutaneous malignant melanoma submitted routinely to a university dermatopathology laboratory between 1985 and 1990, 583 (33%) were not clinically suspected. The overall sensitivity in clinical diagnosis was 67%.

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