Talk:Melanocytic lesions

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Intradermal congenital-type nevus

Microscopic description

The sections show hair-bearing skin with epithelioid, dermal melanocytes, with occasional pigmentation, small or indistinct nucleoli and occasional nuclear inclusions, that are arranged in small nests. The lesional melanocytes are separated from the overlying epidermis in the plane of the sections and track along pilosebaceous units with deeper cuts. The epithelium matures normally to the surface. There is no inflammation or dysplasia.

Final diagnosis

A. Skin ("compund nevus"), right ala, shave biopsy - benign intradermal congenital-type nevus.

Compound nevus, congenital type - 2

The sections show a hair bearing skin with a melanocytic lesion involving both the deep epidermis and dermis. Melanocytes through-out the sections are small, lack nuclear atypia and nucleoli. Mitoses are not identified. In the, epidermis the melanocytes are basal and focally pigmented. In the superifical dermis the melanocytes are in nests and focally pigmented. In the deep dermis the melanocytes are smaller than in the superifical dermis, lack pigmentation and spindled. The lesion shows congenital features; melanocytes cluster around adenxal structures and blood vessels. The lesion is present at the margin.

Thick collagen bundles replace adenxal structures in the dermis focally and is associated with loss of rete ridges in the overlying epidermis; this is consistent with a prior excision at the site.

There is no evidence of malignancy and no significant inflammation.

Final

A. Cheek lesion ("nevus"), right, serial excision - Compound congenital-type nevus