Syringometaplasia: Variants and underlying mechanisms
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Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Abstract
Syringometaplasia is an adaptive, benign, metaplastic cellular process that affects the eccrine ducts and glands in response to a variety of physiological or pathological stimuli. Different subtypes of syringometaplasia have been described, including the squamous, mucinous, and adenomatous types. These metaplastic changes have been reported in association with chemotherapeutic agents, as well as with a variety of skin disorders including multiple infectious, neoplastic, and inflammatory skin diseases. In this review, we attempt to shed light on the different patterns of syringometaplasia, its pathogenesis, the plethora of skin conditions in which it may be observed, and the differential diagnoses that should be considered. © 2016 International Society of Dermatology.
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Adenocarcinoma, Diagnosis, differential, Eccrine glands, Epithelial cells, Hidradenitis, Humans, Metaplasia, Skin neoplasms, Adenomatous eccrine metaplasia, Benign tumor, Differential diagnosis, Disease activity, Disease association, Eccrine squamous syringometaplasia, Fibrous hamartoma of infancy, Human, Keratinizing tumor, Molecular pathology, Mucinous syringometaplasia, Mycosis fungoides, Review, Squamous syringometaplasia, Syndrome delineation, Syringotropic mycosis fungoides, Classification, Eccrine gland, Epithelium cell, Pathology, Secondary, Skin tumor