Abstract

Darier's disease, also known as keratosis follicularis or dyskeratosis follicularis, is a rare disorder of keratinization. It is an autosomal dominant genodermatosis with high penetrance and variable expressivity. Its manifestation appears as hyperkeratotic papules primarily affecting seborrheic areas on the head, neck, thorax, and less frequently the oral mucosa. When oral manifestations are present, the palatal and alveolar mucosae are primarily affected. They usually asymptomatic and are discovered in routine dental examination. Histologically, the lesions present as suprabasal clefts in the epithelium with acantholytic and dyskeratotic cells represented by “corps ronds and grains.” This paper reports a case of an adult male patient who presented with painful whitish lesions on buccal mucosa with crusty lips as the only clinical sign of Darier's disease. As this patient did not have skin lesions or family history, an intraoral biopsy confirmed the diagnosis of Darier's disease by a multidisciplinary team.

Highlights

  • Darier’s disease or keratosis follicularis is a rare autosomal dominant genodermatosis, which is characterized by greasy, crusted, keratotic, yellow brown warty papules and plaques over seborrhoeic areas

  • Case Reports in Pathology (a) White lesions on left side buccal mucosa (a) Suprabasal clefting with dyskeratotic cells

  • Absence of family history could be attributed to the fact that mild forms of the disease have not been recognized among the family members

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Summary

Introduction

Darier’s disease or keratosis follicularis is a rare autosomal dominant genodermatosis, which is characterized by greasy, crusted, keratotic, yellow brown warty papules and plaques over seborrhoeic areas. This is a genetically transmitted disease according to a larger series, about 47% of patient had no clear family history, presumably of incomplete penetrance [1]. The disease is caused by mutations in the ATP 2A gene, which encodes the sarco/endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ ATPase [1]. The oral mucosa is affected in 50% of the cases [4] and lesions are usually asymptomatic and discovered during routine dental examination [5, 6].

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