ecancermedicalscience

Case Report

Actinic keratosis underlying cutaneous horn at an unusual site— a case report

26 Nov 2013
Pragya A Nair, Arvind H Chaudhary, Malay J Mehta

Cutaneous horns are usually found on chronic sun-damaged skin. A cutaneous horn is a rare tumour, often conical, circumscribed, and composed of dead keratin usually derived from base keratinocytes. It occurs mainly in association with underlying benign, premalignant, and malignant cutaneous diseases. The commonest malignancy is squamous cell carcinoma. Thus, to accurately ascertain the nature of the condition at the base of the lesion and to rule out malignancy, an excision biopsy is indicated. Here, we report a case of cutaneous horn over the palmar aspect of the left middle finger in a 45-year-old man whose histopathology showed actinic keratosis.

Related Articles

Prasoon Mishra, Rahat Hadi, Ajeet Kumar Gandhi, Madhup Rastogi, Rohini Khurana, Ashish Singhal, Surendra Prasad Mishra, Anoop Srivastava, Avinav Bharati, Ashish Chandra Agarwal, Avinash Poojari, Vachaspati Kumar Mishra, Raunaq Puri, Akanksha Manral, Vikas Gupta, Bhoopendra Pratap Vishwaranjan, Saumyta Mishra
Navjot Kaur, Pritam Halder, Yuvaraj Krishnamoorthy, Gursimer Jeet, Garima Bhatt, Sathish Rajaa, Priyanka Sudhir, Rohit Sharma, Sarthak Tandon, Manish Gupta
María Valeria Jiménez-Báez, Sofía Concepción Thomas-Gómez, Gabriel González-Guerrero, David Rojano-Mejía, Eduardo Patricio Achurra-Godinez
Berthe Sabine Esson Mapoko, Etienne Atenguena, Abdel Nasser Nsangou Moun, Esther Dina Bell, Lionel Tabola, Dominique Anaba, Anne Sango, Rachel Tayou
Liudmila Castelo David, Teresa Mota Garcia, Isaulina Barreto, Esperança Carvalho, Laurinda Barreto, Clara Aleydis, Laurinda Coelho, Lúcio Lara Santos