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Histopathologic findings in ointment pseudo-cheilitis: An alert to dermatopathologists. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • * Patients with this condition often have underlying anxiety or depression, significantly affecting their quality of life, and it is commonly misdiagnosed as other forms of cheilitis.
  • * The key histopathological finding in biopsies is laminated parakeratotic material at the lip surface, which indicates a mix of normal skin shedding and external substances, prompting a need for dermatopathologists to consider this diagnosis.

Article Abstract

Ointment pseudo-cheilitis is a recently recognized distinctive type of self-induced cheilitis. Lesions consist of a variable amount of crusts adhered to the vermilion. These crusts consist of dried saliva and dead cells mixed with applied medications attached to the lip surface. Patients are typically severely anxious or depressed; the condition impacts quality of life. Ointment pseudo-cheilitis is frequently misdiagnosed as exfoliative cheilitis or cheilitis glandularis. Biopsy reports are often non-revealing because there are no established histopathological criteria for this disease, and clinicians usually do not formulate the correct diagnostic hypothesis. Here, we present the histopathological findings of four cases of ointment pseudo-cheilitis. The most consistent finding was the presence of laminated parakeratotic material detached from the epithelium in biopsies that are devoid of other significant diagnostic changes. This material at the lip surface possibly represents physiologic labial desquamation mixed with dried saliva and applied medication. With this report, we intend to alert dermatopathologists to the diagnosis of ointment pseudo-cheilitis if they receive biopsies from patients who present clinically exuberant labial lesions that show only minimal histopathological changes.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/cup.14534DOI Listing

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