Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3211565 Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology 2007 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundIn dermoscopy the presence of a blue hue is a clue for malignancy, although a blue tint is sometimes observable in benign lesions.ObjectiveTo identify the in vivo confocal microscopy correlates of the blue hue for improving diagnostic accuracy for melanoma.MethodsFifty-seven melanomas, 41 junctional, 88 compound, and 27 Spitz nevi were studied by dermoscopy, confocal microscopy, and histopathology.ResultsConfocal microscopy enabled the distinction between blue areas and blue veil, the former characterized by plump cells corresponding to melanophages and inflammatory infiltrate at histology, the latter by the contemporary presence of epidermal and dermal features consistent with diagnosis of melanoma, such as disarranged pattern, pagetoid cells, cytologic and architectural atypias, nonhomogeneous and cerebriform clusters, and dermal nucleated cells.LimitationsConfocal microscopy failed to accurately distinguish Spitz nevi, because of the presence of cytoarchitectural disarray in the epidermis and the upper dermis.ConclusionConfocal microscopy enabled the in vivo identification of characteristic cytological substrates correlated with the blue features in dermoscopy.

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Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Dermatology
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