Letter: notes & comments
Is superficial morphea synonymous with atrophoderma Pasini-Pierini?

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Cited by (20)

  • Superficial morphea: A rare condition and report of three unique cases

    2021, JAAD Case Reports
    Citation Excerpt :

    IAPP commonly coexists with morphea and is believed to be an abortive scleroderma in which sclerosis fails to form. IAPP is histologically characterized with variable epidermal atrophy: decreased thickness with flattening of rete ridges.3 Case 1 presented with atrophic patches and few areas of superficial ulceration.

  • Update on the classification and treatment of localized scleroderma

    2013, Actas Dermo-Sifiliograficas
    Citation Excerpt :

    These lesions often affect the trunk or the proximal areas of the limbs.9,13 Most authors agree that the lesions of atrophoderma of Pasini and Pierini, in which the skin is not indurated, constitute a variant of morphea, either an abortive form of the disease9,16 or an even more superficial variant in which the sclerotic changes affect only the papillary or superficial dermis.17 There is evidence to support the relationship between these lesions and morphea.

  • Localized cutaneous fibrosing disorders

    2013, Rheumatic Disease Clinics of North America
    Citation Excerpt :

    IAPP lacks sclerosis as a feature, and lesions commonly merge over time, creating a moth-eaten appearance (Swiss cheese–like appearance) not consistent with typical morphea. The more recently described term superficial morphea has become a more accepted way to describe IAPP given its lack of sclerosis and its hypopigmented or hyperpigmented appearance (Fig. 3).16,17 Generalized LS is a more severe subtype of LS, as it is characterized by 4 or more indurated plaques greater than 3 cm in diameter involving 2 or more anatomic sites (head and neck, each extremity, anterior trunk, and posterior trunk) according to Laxer and Zulian.10

  • Disorders of collagen

    2009, Weedon's Skin Pathology: Third Edition
  • Systemic and localized scleroderma

    2006, Clinics in Dermatology
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