The rewarding use of nail clippings processed histologically for the diagnosis of some nail diseases is well established. A new application of the nail plate biopsies (NPBs) is the detection of crystals in the subungual horn. Besides other subungual crystals, urate crystals are heretofore undescribed. This presentation adds to the advantages of an NPB: the detection of some cases of gout on which urate crystals are extruded subclinically. While searching for fungi, 2 cases of gout were diagnosed histologically, aided by unstained thick sections. A history of gout was then confirmed. No tophi were noted in or near the nail field. Chasing for crystals opens the study of fluids that may exude or transude into nail structures, a kind of "nail window" into hematic or metabolic abnormalities. In sum, the abundance of cytologic and histologic findings in an NPB can expand the armamentarium of physicians to evaluate nail diseases and even systemic diseases in a noninvasive manner.
It is important to recognize these atypical presentations of dermatophytic infections in immunosuppressed patients, which may warrant a more aggressive treatment in order to achieve resolution.
We present an unusual case of congenital spiradenoma in a 4-week-old neonate. The appearance of this tumor can be confused with undifferentiated small-cell skin tumors or other adnexal skin neoplasims. A clinical and morphologic correlation including an immunohistochemistry panel is necessary to determine a final diagnosis.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.