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Lentigo simplexL81.42
Synonym(s)
DefinitionThis section has been translated automatically.
Not uniformly defined and used (clinical and histological) term for a usually 0.1-0.3 cm large, but also larger (up to 3.0 cm), acquired (e.g. due to actinic influences = lentigo solaris = lentigo senilis), seasonally non-reversible, brown pigment spot of the skin and/or mucosa (lentigo of the mucosa/melanoticspots of the mucosa), caused by a linear proliferation of basal melanocytes.
A lentigo simplex may progress to a junctional nevus (see nevus melanocytärer below ) or to a seborrheic keratosis.
Congenital lentigo is not referred to as such, but as a nevus spilus or café-au-lait spot.
The "freckles" seen in fair-skinned young children in the summer months are not called lentigines, but ephelides. Unlike lentigines, they completely regress during the winter months.
In the case of circumscribed mucosal pigmentation(melanotic patches of the mucous membranes - mucosal lentigo), the terms "lentigo" and " melanosis" are often used synonymously.
EtiopathogenesisThis section has been translated automatically.
ManifestationThis section has been translated automatically.
ClinicThis section has been translated automatically.
- Integument: Mostly occurring in plural, pinhead- to lentil-sized, brown, sharply defined hyperpigmentations. Preference for light-exposed areas of skin. A transition into a melanocytic nevus is possible.
- Reflected light microscopy: Regular, prominent pigment network, possibly central diffuse pigmentation, thinning of the pigment network in the periphery.
S.a.u. naevoid lentigo; see below lentiginosis.