Which disorder of protein metabolism is associated with skin lesions and malignancy? Primary systemic amyloidosis. The cause of this disease is a plasma cell dyscrasia, even though bone marrow aspiration, in some cases, may be normal. The most common associated skin lesions are purpura or ecchymoses that are seen most frequently on thin skin areas, that is, eyelids, neck, groin, axilla, umbilicus, or oral mucosa. The hemorrhagic lesions may occur on areas of clinically normal skin or in skin having waxy papules, plaques, nodules, or tumors. The intracutaneous bleeding is due to infiltration of blood vessel walls with amyloid protein. Other less common skin lesions include alopecia, nail dystrophies, scleroderma-like lesions, macroglossia, cutis verticis gyrata, bullous lesions, and dyspigmentation. |
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