AI Article Synopsis

  • A 67-year-old man presented with a coin-sized verrucous plaque on his abdomen, which later developed a small granulation-like lesion.
  • The biopsy of the lesion revealed a tumor made of proliferating eosinophilic cells, including Schwann cells and mature ganglion cells, leading to a diagnosis of ganglioneuroma.
  • The surrounding verrucous lesion was identified as seborrheic keratosis after simple resection.

Article Abstract

A 67-year-old man noticed on the abdominal skin a coin-sized verrucous plaque, in which a small granulation-like lesion developed several weeks before the first consultation at our clinic. The histology of the biopsied granulation-like lesion showed a well demarcated, but not associated with the collagenous capsule, mass of proliferating eosinophilic cells, consisting of intervening spindle-shaped Schwann cells and mature ganglion cells scattered in the tumor nest. We diagnosed this tumor nest as a ganglioneuroma, which rarely develops in the skin tissue. The simply resected surrounding verrucous lesion was histologically seborrheic keratosis.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1346-8138.2002.tb00267.xDOI Listing

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