Superimposed linear atopic dermatitis

Pediatric Dermatology
Angella López-CedeñoAntonio Torrelo

Abstract

Superimposed linear atopic dermatitis is rarely manifested in polygenic disease as a counterpart to type 2 segmental mosaicism of monogenic skin diseases. Linear arrangement following Blaschko lines represents more severe disease on a generalized background of atopic dermatitis, perhaps reflecting clonal loss of heterozygosity. Only three cases of superimposed linear atopic dermatitis have been reported; we describe three additional cases.

References

Jul 1, 1994·The British Journal of Dermatology·A Taïeb
Oct 18, 2005·Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology·Florian HladikBeatrix Volc-Platzer
Sep 18, 2007·Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology·Rudolf Happle
May 27, 2009·European Journal of Dermatology : EJD·Yasuhiro KawachiFujio Otsuka
May 21, 2010·European Journal of Dermatology : EJD·Caroline BussmannNatalija Novak
May 28, 2011·Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology·Khaled EzzedineAlain Taieb
Oct 27, 2011·Journal der Deutschen Dermatologischen Gesellschaft = Journal of the German Society of Dermatology : JDDG·Rudolf Happle

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Citations

Sep 20, 2019·Clinical Case Reports·Julie Van Gysel, Ramon Grimalt
Jul 18, 2021·Pediatric Dermatology·Maria A LeszczynskaLucia Z Diaz

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Atopic Dermatitis

Atopic dermatitis is a chronic inflammatory genetically determined disease of the skin marked by increased ability to form reagin (IgE), with increased susceptibility to allergic rhinitis and asthma, and hereditary disposition to a lowered threshold for pruritus. Discover the latest research on atopic dermatitis here.

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