Author/Authors :
Eftekhari, Hojat Skin Research Center - Dermatology Department - Guilan University of Medical Sciences - Razi Hospital, Rasht , Rafiei, Rana Skin Research Center - Dermatology Department - Guilan University of Medical Sciences - Razi Hospital, Rasht , Shamsa, Fatemeh Skin Research Center - Dermatology Department - Guilan University of Medical Sciences - Razi Hospital, Rasht , Rafiee, Behnam Department of Pathology - NYU Winthrop Hospital, NY, US
Abstract :
Porokeratoses are uncommon hereditary or acquired keratinization
disorders due to abnormal clones of keratinocytes in the epidermis.
Porokeratoses have several clinical features which may occur
simultaneously. A rare type is verrucous porokeratosis (VPK).
Herein, we present a 47-year-old man with a 4-year history
of perianal verrucous lesions and one year history of annular
pruritic lesions on his extremities. Tissue biopsies from the
annular and verrucous lesions showed cornoid lamellation in the
horny layer with epidermal invagination and lichenoid reaction
in the dermis that favored porokeratosis (PK). Genotyping for
human papilloma virus (HPV) on the paraffin block of the
verrucous lesion was negative. Shave excision was performed
with moderate improvement. Annular and VPK lesions might
coexist in an individual patient and we should consider VPK in
the differential diagnoses of perianal warty lesions.