
handle: 10550/111493
The aim of our article is to underline the cutaneous lesions accompanying spinal disraphysm. We would like to stress the responsibility of physicians, particularly dermatologists, pediatricians, orthopedic surgeons, urologists, neurologists and neurosurgeons to recognize as early as possible these cutaneous stigmata. In this way patients will be studied and treated as soon as possible. No cutaneous lesion in the posterior middle line of the back or close to it should be removed until any possibly associated malformation has been thoroughly studied. Otherwise the diagnosis of a suyacent spinal disraphysm might be unduly delayed and thus allow the appearance of irreversible neurological deficits. Cutaneous lesions associated with spinal dysraphysm are: areas of atrophic skin, aplasia cutis congenita, conenital skin scarrs, dermal pits, dermal sinuses, dischromic lesions, hyperpigmented lesions, abnormal pilifications, vascular lesions, subcutaneous lipomas, polipoid lesions simulating tails, neurofibromas, melanocitic nevus ans some lesions of tumoral origin Of there the most common cutaneous lesions associated with spinal dysraphysm is the lipoma, followed by the dermal sinuses, the anomalous pilifications and the angiomas.
pediatria, dermatologia
pediatria, dermatologia
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