Ichthyosis hystrix

Ichthyosis hystrix
Classification and external resources
Specialty medical genetics
ICD-10 Q80.8
OMIM 146590 146600 602540

Ichthyosis hystrix is a group of rare skin disorders in the ichthyosis family of skin disorders characterized by massive hyperkeratosis with an appearance like spiny scales.[1] This term is also used to refer to a type of epidermal nevi with extensive bilateral distribution.[1][2]

Ichthyosis hystrix, Curth-Macklin type

Edward Lambert, an Englishman who suffered from ichthyosis hystrix.

The symptoms of Ichthyosis hystrix Curth-Macklin are similar to epidermolytic hyperkeratosis (NPS-2 type) but there is no blistering and the hyperkeratosis is verrucous or spine-like. The hyperkeratosis is brown-grey in colour and is most obvious on the arms and legs. It is an autosomal dominant condition and can be caused by errors to the KRT1 gene.[3][4] It is named after Helen Ollendorff Curth (1899-1982), a German-Jewish dermatologist, and Madge Thurlow Macklin (1893–1962),[5] an American medical geneticist, and is one of the first syndromes named after two women.[6]

Ichthyosis hystrix, Lambert type

Also known as Ichthyosis hystrix gravior or porcupine man. This disease is characterised by spiny scales which cover the entire body except the face, genitals, palms and soles. The only known cases were in Edward Lambert (known as the porcupine man) who was exhibited in front of the Royal Society in London in 1731 and three generations of his descendants. No cases of this disease are now known though some experts believe that it may have been a type of epidermolytic hyperkeratosis. From the history of the Lambert family the disease appears to have been an autosomal dominant condition.[1][7]

Hystrix-like ichthyosis with deafness syndrome

HID syndrome is also known as Ichthyosis hystrix, Rheydt type after the German city of Rheydt near Düsseldorf where it was first discovered. Symptoms are bilateral hearing loss and spiky hyperkeratotic masses which cover the whole body though the palms and soles are less badly affected. It can be differentiated from KID syndrome which also has symptoms of deafness and ichthyosis by the different distribution of hyperkeratosis. It is an autosomal dominant condition caused by a mutation to the GJB2 gene (the same gene affected by KID syndrome).[8][9]

Ichthyosis hystrix, Baefvertstedt type

An extremely rare disease of which only a few isolated cases are known.[1]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Ichthyosis hystrix, DermIS
  2. Freedberg; et al. (2003). Fitzpatrick's Dermatology in General Medicine (6th ed.). McGraw-Hill. p. 771. ISBN 0-07-138076-0.
  3. Online 'Mendelian Inheritance in Man' (OMIM) Ichthyosis hystrix, Curth-Macklin type -146590
  4. "Ichthyosis hystrix of Curth-Macklin". Rare Disease Registry. University of Padua.
  5. Al Aboud, Khalid; Al Aboud, Daifullah (2011). "Helen Ollendorff Curth and Curth-Macklin Syndrome" (PDF). The Open Dermatology Journal 5: 28–30. doi:10.2174/1874372201105010028.
  6. Burgdorf WH, Scholz A (July 2004). "Helen Ollendorff Curth and William Curth: from Breslau and Berlin to Bar Harbor". J. Am. Acad. Dermatol. 51 (1): 84–9. doi:10.1016/j.jaad.2003.12.035. PMID 15243529.
  7. Online 'Mendelian Inheritance in Man' (OMIM) Ichthyosis hystrix gravior -146600
  8. König A, Küster W, Berger R, Happle R (December 1997). "Autosomal dominant inheritance of HID syndrome (hystrix-likeichthyosis with deafness)". European Journal of Dermatology 7 (8): 554–5.
  9. Online 'Mendelian Inheritance in Man' (OMIM) Ichthyosis, Hystrix-like, with deafness -602540
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