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Volume 68 Numbers 4 & 5 September / October 2001 |
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| Childhood Longitudinal Melanonychia: Case Reports and Review of the Literature | 331335 |
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| Address correspondence to Donald Rudikoff, M.D., Department of Dermatology, Box 1048, One East 100th Street, New York, NY 10029. |
ABSTRACT
Longitudinal melanonychia refers to a brown or brown-black longitudinal
band on a fingernail or toenail. A number of conditions can cause longitudinal
melanonychia, but its main importance is that, in some patients, it may indicate
the presence of a subungual malignant melanoma. Hyperpigmented nail bands are
not uncommon in African-American, Latino and Asian patients, especially those
over sixty years of age, and are often multiple in these groups. Longitudinal
melanonychia is most worrisome when there is a solitary, dark, broad longitudinal
band with pigment extending over the proximal nail fold (Hutchinsons sign).
Such findings are considered to be a strong indication for biopsy of the nail
matrix to rule out melanoma. Since nail matrix biopsy sometimes results in permanent
nail deformity, and since the incidence of malignant melanoma is quite small
in the pediatric age group, there is some controversy as to whether this procedure
should routinely be performed in children. We report two cases of dramatic longitudinal
melanonychia in toddlers and review the current literature on the management
of this striking condition in the pediatric age group.
KEY WORDS
Melanoma,
children,
melanonychia
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