Table 3-20 Disorders of Fat |
| Disease | | Clinical Findings | | Pathology | | Associations |
| Anetoderma | | Focal dermal defect: localized areas of atrophic skin with laxity or herniated appearance over trunk, thighs and arms, ± overlying skin depressed or macular | | Normal epidermis, ↓ or absent elastic tissue in dermis with special stain (may appear normal on H&E), ± perivascular lymphocytes | | May be primary (idiopathic) or secondary (infection, inflammatory cutaneous disorder or tumor) |
| Atrophoderma of Pasini and Pierini | | Single to multiple well-demarcated oval hyperpigmented patches with slight depression on back (most common) in young adults and adolescents
{If linear following Blaschko’s lines → atrophoderma of Moulin} | | Minimal change including flattening of rete ridges, basal layer with ↑ melanin, ↓ dermal thickness, ± perivascular infiltrate | | Unclear if atypical atrophic form of morphea or separate entity; may be related to B. burgdorferi |
| Mid-dermal elastolysis | | Areas with diffuse fine wrinkling over trunk, upper arms and/or neck, ± preceding erythema | | Normal epidermis, selective loss of elastic fibers in mid dermis | | None |
| Follicular atrophoderma | | Dimple-like depression in follicular orifices consistent with ice-pick depressions on dorsal hands/feet or cheeks | | Dilated pore ± with underlying atrophy, often ↓ elastic fibers
{If limited to cheeks → atrophoderma vermiculatum (Rombo syndrome, Nicolau- Balus syndrome)} | | Bazex syndrome
Conradi-Hünermann- Happle syndrome |
| Piezogenic pedal papules | | Skin-colored papules in heels with pressure (due to herniation of fat), disappears when weight removed | | Fragmentation of dermal elastic tissue and herniation of fat into dermis | | Normal variant |
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