RT Book, Section A1 Ko, Christine J. A2 Goldsmith, Lowell A. A2 Katz, Stephen I. A2 Gilchrest, Barbara A. A2 Paller, Amy S. A2 Leffell, David J. A2 Wolff, Klaus SR Print(0) ID 56040652 T1 Chapter 66. Dermal Hypertrophies and Benign Fibroblastic/Myofibroblastic Tumors T2 Fitzpatrick's Dermatology in General Medicine, 8e YR 2012 FD 2012 PB The McGraw-Hill Companies PP New York, NY SN 978-0-07-166904-7 LK accessmedicine.mhmedical.com/content.aspx?aid=56040652 RD 2024/03/28 AB |PrintDermal Hypertrophies and Benign Fibroblastic/Myofibroblastic Tumors at a GlanceCommon benign dermal fibrous lesions include hypertrophic scar, keloid, dermatofibroma, and acrochordon.Certain benign tumors with a prominent dermal connective tissue component (e.g., angiofibroma, fibrofolliculoma/trichodiscoma, acrochordon-like lesions, and connective tissue nevi) may be associated with genetic disorders.Some dermal hypertrophies and tumors (e.g., desmoid tumor, infantile fibromatosis, infantile myofibromatosis) can at times be aggressive with high rates of recurrence.Other entities that present in infancy and childhood include fibrous hamartoma of infancy, fibromatosis colli, infantile digital fibromatosis, calcifying aponeurotic fibroma, juvenile hyaline fibromatosis, and infantile systemic hyalinosis.Other entities that primarily affect adults include adult fibromatoses (palmoplantar, penile, knuckle pads), pachydermodactyly, reactive lesions (nodular fasciitis, elastofibroma), solitary lesions (acquired digital fibrokeratoma, dermatomyofibroma, pleomorphic fibroma, collagenous fibroma, myofibroma, solitary fibrous tumor), and clinically distinctive hypertrophies (cutis verticis gyrata, pachydermoperiostitis, cerebriform fibrous proliferation).