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Case Reports
. 2001 Nov 10;145(45):2178-82.

[Two neonates with vesicular skin lesions due to incontinentia pigmenti]

[Article in Dutch]
Affiliations
  • PMID: 11727618
Case Reports

[Two neonates with vesicular skin lesions due to incontinentia pigmenti]

[Article in Dutch]
D H Winterberg et al. Ned Tijdschr Geneeskd. .

Abstract

In two neonate girls with vesicular skin lesions, incontinentia pigmenti (Bloch-Sulzberger syndrome) was diagnosed. This rare X-linked dominant ectodermal disease can cause abnormalities in several organ systems. Most prominent are the dermatological abnormalities, developing in 4 stages: the vesicular stage, the verrucous stage, the hyperpigmentation phase, and the atrophic phase. In addition to the cutaneous manifestations, many patients have anomalies of nails, hair and teeth. Serious related abnormalities of the eyes (intraocular vasculopathy) and central nervous system (convulsions, mental retardation) may occur. In 1989 the locus for the incontinentia pigmenti mutation was shown to be present on Xq28. Recently it was shown that the causative mutation is located on the NEMO ('NF-kappa B essential modulator') gene. A NEMO knock-out mouse model shows a dermatopathy of a transient nature, resembling the skin lesions in patients with incontinentia pigmenti.

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