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Proliferating trichilemmal cysts (also known as a pilar tumor, proliferating follicular cystic neoplasm, proliferating pilar tumor, and proliferating trichilemmal tumor) [1] is a cutaneous condition, characterized by proliferations of squamous cells forming scroll-like structures. [1] [2]: 678
A trichilemmal cyst (or pilar cyst) is a common cyst that forms from a hair follicle, most often on the scalp, and is smooth, mobile, and filled with keratin, a protein component found in hair, nails, skin, and horns. Trichilemmal cysts are clinically and histologically distinct from trichilemmal horns, hard tissue that is much rarer and not ...
Proliferating epidermoid cyst (proliferating epithelial cyst) Proliferating trichilemmal cyst (pilar tumor, proliferating follicular cystic neoplasm, proliferating pilar tumor, proliferating trichilemmal tumor) Pseudocyst of the auricle (auricular endochondrial pseudocyst, cystic chondromalacia, endochondral pseudocyst, intracartilaginous cyst)
Proliferating epidermoid cyst; Proliferating epithelial cyst; Proliferating follicular cystic neoplasm; Proliferating pilar tumor; Proliferating trichilemmal cyst; Proliferating trichilemmal tumor; Pseudocyst of the auricle; Pseudoepitheliomatous keratotic and micaceous balanitis; Pseudoglandular squamous cell carcinoma; PUVA keratosis
This classification is widely used by cancer registries. ... Proliferating trichilemmal cyst; Proliferating trichilemmal tumor; M8110/0 ... M8170/0 Liver cell ...
Consultant interventional radiologist Dr Brian Stedman said his team had performed 300 procedures in 100 patients whose form of eye cancer known as ocular melanoma had spread to the liver, called ...
Cock's peculiar tumour is a sebaceous cyst linked growth that can resemble a squamous cell carcinoma. [1] The name is given after a 19th-century English surgeon Edward Cock. [2] The proliferating cyst is usually solitary, but it often arises from a simple trichilemmal cysts in the hair follicle epithelium and these are multiple in 70% of cases ...
CYLD cutaneous syndrome (CCS) encompasses three rare inherited cutaneous adnexal tumor syndromes: multiple familial trichoepithelioma (MFT1) (also termed epithelioma adenoides cysticum and epithelioma adenoides cysticum of Brooke [1]), Brooke–Spiegler syndrome (BSS), and familial cylindromatosis (FC). [2]