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A comprehensive review of all the vascular proliferations involving the skin and subcutaneous tissue, including recently described disease entities. Superbly illustrated with both clinical and histopathologic photographs, the book moves from a proposed new system of classification and nomenclature for vascular neoplasms, to a full discussion of benign and malignant proliferations, including hamartomas, benign neoplasms, malignant neoplasms, and several related newly reported diseases. The authors describe in-depth the clinical and morphologic aspects of each entity and detail their clinicopathologic correlation, differential diagnosis, prognosis, and therapy.
Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras
Texte du rabat
Cutaneous vascular proliferations are exceedingly common, and with the recent identification of new diseases, their diagnosis, classification, and treatment can be complicated. In Pathology of Vascular Skin Lesions: Clinicopathologic Correlations, Omar P. Sangüeza, md, and Luis Requena, md, review in detail all the vascular proliferations involving the skin and subcutaneous tissue, including recently described disease entities. Superbly illustrated with both clinical and histopathologic photographs, the book moves from a proposed new system of classification and nomenclature for vascular neoplasms, to a full discussion of benign and malignant proliferations, including hamartomas, benign neoplasms, and several newly reported related diseases. The authors provide an in-depth description of the clinical and morphologic aspects of each entity and detail their clinicopathologic correlation, differential diagnosis, prognosis, and therapy. Additional chapters outline the normal embryology, histology, and anatomy of skin vasculature, as well as the use of special techniques for the study of vascular proliferations.
Comprehensive and practical, Pathology of Vascular Skin Lesions: Clinicopathologic Correlations provides dermatologists, pathologists, and skin researchers with a complete, authoritative guide to the diagnosis and treatment of vascular proliferations of the skin, all generously illustrated with a wide-ranging array of clinical cases and histopathologic specimens.
Contenu
Content.- 1 Embryology, Anatomy, and Histology of the Vasculature of the Skin.- 1. Embryologie Aspects.- 2. Anatomie and Histologie Aspects of the Dermis and Blood Vessels.- 2 Special Techniques for the Study of Vessels and Vascular Proliferations.- 1. Immunohistochemical Stains.- 2. Molecular Techniques.- 3. Cytogenetic Studies.- 3 Classification of Cutaneous Vascular Proliferations.- 4 Cutaneous Vascular Hamartomas.- 1. Phakomatosis Pigmentovascularis.- 2. Eccrine Angiomatous Hamartoma.- 5 Cutaneous Vascular Malformations.- 1. Nevus Anemicus.- 2. Cutis Marmorata Telangiectatica Congenita.- 3. Nevus Flammeus.- 4. Hyperkeratotic Vascular Stains.- 5. Venous Malformations.- 6. Superficial Cutaneous Lymphatic Malformations.- 7. Cystic Lymphatic Malformations (Cystic Hygromas).- 8. Lymphangiomatosis.- 6 Cutaneous Lesions Characterized by Dilation of Preexisting Vessels.- 1. Spider Angioma (Nevus Araneus).- 2. Capillary Aneurysm-Venous Lake.- 3. Telangiectases.- 4. Angiokeratomas.- 5. Lymphangiectases.- 7 Cutaneous Vascular Hyperplasias.- 1. Angiolymphoid Hyperplasia with Eosinophilia.- 2. Pyogenic Granuloma.- 3. Bacillary Angiomatosis.- 4. Verruga Peruana.- 5. Intravascular Papillary Endothelial Hyperplasia (Masson's Pseudo-Angiosarcoma).- 6. Pseudo-Kaposi's Sarcoma.- 7. Reactive Angioendotheliomatosis.- 8 Benign Neoplasms.- 1. Angioma Serpiginosum.- 2. Infantile Hemangiomas.- 3. Cherry Angiomas (Senile Angiomas).- 4. Arteriovenous Hemangioma.- 5. Hobnail Hemangioma (Targetoid Hemosiderotic Hemangioma).- 6. Microvenular Hemangioma.- 7. Tufted Angioma.- 8. Glomeruloid Hemangioma.- 9. Acquired Elastotic Hemangioma.- 10. Kaposiform Hemangioendothelioma.- 11. Sinusoidal Hemangioma.- 12. Giant Cell Angioblastoma.- 13. Spindle Cell Hemangioma (Formerly Spindle CellHemangioendothelioma).- 14. Benign Lymphangioendothelioma.- 15. Benign Vascular Proliferations in Irradiated Skin.- 16. Glomus Tumors.- 17. Hemangiopericytoma.- 18. Cutaneous Myofîbroma.- 9 Malignant Neoplasms.- 1. Kaposi's Sarcoma.- 2. Epithelioid Hemangioendothelioma.- 3. Endo vascular Papillary Angioendothelioma (Dabska's Tumor or Papillary Intralymphatic Angioendothelioma).- 4. Retiform Hemangioendothelioma.- 5. Composite Hemangioendothelioma.- 6. Cutaneous Angiosarcoma of the Face and Scalp of Elderly Patients (Wilson Jones' Angiosarcoma).- 7. Cutaneous Angiosarcoma Associated with Lymphedema.- 8. Radiation-Induced Cutaneous Angiosarcoma.- 9. Epithelioid Angiosarcoma.- 10. Malignant Glomus Tumor (Glomangiosarcoma).- 10 Other Cutaneous Neoplasms With a Significant Vascular Component.- 1. Multinucleate Cell Angiohistiocytoma.- 2. Angiofibroma.- 3. Angioleiomyoma.- 4. Angiolipoma.- 5. Cutaneous Angiolipoleiomyoma.- 6. Cutaneous Angiomyxoma.- 7. Aggressive Angiomyxoma.- 11 Disorders Erroneously Considered as Vascular Neoplasms.- 1. Kimura's Disease.- 2. Malignant Angioendotheliomatosis (Intravascular Lymphomatosis).- 3. Acral Pseudolymphomatous Angiokeratoma in Children (APACHE).