We describe the case of a 10-year-old boy with a porokeratotic eccrine ostial and dermal duct nevus (PEODDN) of late onset. The patient had an 8-year history of multiple keratotic papules on the dorsal surface, and multiple yellowish pitting lesions on the plantar surface of the right foot. Light-microscopic studies of both lesions showed multiple comoid lamella-like parakera-totic columns, which exclusively arose over eccrine sweat ducts in which the acrosyringium was dilated. Although PEODDN is considered to be a congenital hamartoma of eccrine origin, a review of the literature showed us that the frequency of a late-onset variant may be as high as 26%.
The term HIV-associated eosinophilic folliculitis (EF) designates an idiopathic dermatitis that appears in HIV-infected patients with different clinical manifestations but with a distinctive histological feature characterized by a predominantly eosinophilic infiltrate in the follicular infundibula. On the other side, follicular mucinosis (FM) is a reaction pattern in the follicular epithelium, characterized by a mucinous degeneration of the outer sheath of follicles and sebaceous glands. It has been described in association with a variety of unrelated conditions. We report 2 HIV-infected patients with a pruritic papular eruption. Histopathological study revealed the coexistence of EF and FM. To our knowledge, this is the first report that describes this association. The possible relationship between these two entities is discussed.
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