Abstract

Restrictive dermopathy is a rare autosomal recessive skin disorder that is fatal in the neonatal period. Clinical and pathologic findings are distinctive and allow for a specific diagnosis in most cases. We present a case of an affected infant and a review of the previously reported cases in the literature. The infant had thick shiny skin with reduced compliance and multiple spontaneous linear splits. Additional findings included an abnormal facies with a distinctive small, round and open mouth, low set ears, small nose, widely spaced sutures, flexion contractures of the extremities, and poorly expanded lungs. The infant expired 65 h after birth. Histologic findings of the skin at autopsy included a relatively unremarkable epidermis, a flat dermal-epidermal junction (absent rete ridges), an overall thinned dermis with hypoplastic appendage structures, a dense fibrotic reticular dermis with collagen parallel to the epidermis, a sharp subcutaneous margin, and an abnormally thick layer of subcutaneous adipose tissue. Electron microscopic findings included dense dermal patches of collagen and fibroblasts with abundant endoplasmic reticulum and unusually small tonofilaments. Review of previously reported cases reveals strikingly consistent findings. This rare condition illustrates that abnormal cutaneous development may produce fetal hypokinesia, leading to profound effects on intrauterine growth and development. The autosomal recessive pattern of inheritance and morphologic changes of the skin and skeletal system in this disorder suggest that a structural protein or enzyme defect, perhaps of collagen metabolism, may underlie the pathogenesis.

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