ARTICLE
Phacomatosis pigmentovascularis (PPV) is a rare condition first described
by Ota in 1947 [1]. This entity is characterized by the simultaneous occurrence
of a pigmented and a vascular nevus. Classification is based on the type
of pigmented nevus. Each type is subdivided into two subtypes: (a) when
only cutaneous involvement is present, (b) when cutaneous and systemic
disease are found. Two cases of PPV type II are reported herein. One of
them is an unusual observation in which PPV is associated with an Arnold-Chiari
malformation.
Case reports
Case 1
A 23 year-old Algerian man was referred to us for cutaneous vascular
and pigmentary abnormalities. His parents were not consanguinous, and
there was no family history of neurocutaneous disease. He was born with
an extensive nevus flammeus involving the face, including the area of
the first division of the trigeminal nerve on the right side. Lateral
sides of the neck, thorax and both arms were also affected (Fig.
1). Examination revealed on upper part of the back, blue gray
pigmentation unclearly delimited, evocative of aberrant mongolian spots
(Fig. 2). A nevus anemicus
was also noted on the right pectoral area (Fig.
1). Neurological and ophthalmological examinations were normal.
There was no mental retardation, nor personal history of seizure.
Laboratory studies showed an increased erythrocyte count (5.3 109/L)
with normal haemoglobin concentration (14.3 g/dL) and microcytosis (mean
corpuscular volume 79 10 15 fL). Thalassemia was investigated
by means of haemoglobin electrophoresis because of the Algerian origin
of the patient. The following values were noted: HbA2 was increased (4.5%),
HbA1 and HbF were normal (64% and 1.5% respectively) leading to the diagnosis
of minor beta thalassemia.
X-rays showed no abnormalities in the chest or bones. Encephalic MRI
revealed an Arnold-Chiari malformation type I, characterized by a low
position of the bulboprotuberancial junction and cerebellous tonsils,
hydrocephalia, and cervical syringomyelia (Fig.
3). Some abnormalities were also noted in the cranium: diploë
enlargement of the fronto-parietal and occipital areas together with an
erosion of the skull bone of the left frontal area, filled by a brain
hernia (Fig. 4). All these
findings were asymptomatic.
Case 2
The second patient was a 30-year-old Italian woman with no neurocutaneous
disease in her family history. She presented with an extensive congenital
nevus flammeus involving the thorax, left arm, back (Fig.
5), and lower limbs (Fig.
6). Blue-black macular pigmentation was seen on periorbital areas,
involving upper and lower eyelids of both eyes (Fig.
7). This discoloration was also present on the sclera, and the
right shoulder. Nevus anemicus was associated with these cutaneous abnormalities
on the right pectoral area. Childhood growth and development were normal,
and there was no history of seizure. X-ray investigations of the chest
and bones, arterio-venous ultrasound examination of the limbs, and encephalic
MRI were all normal. Ophthalmologic examination showed bilateral scleral
melanosis, without any other abnormalities.
Discussion
The distinctive association of vascular cutaneous malformations with
pigmentary nevi was first discribed by Ota et al. [1], who proposed
the term "phacomatosis pigmentovascularis". Four types were classified
by Hasegawa et al. They also proposed dividing the classification
into localized (a) or systemic (b) forms, whether it was associated or
not with visceral involvement [2, 3]. Nevus anemicus can be an additional
feature in types II, III, and IV (Table
I).
More than eighty cases of PPV have been reported in the literature,
most of them being Japanese patients. This disorder is also more frequent
in Mediterranean and Indian people, and is exceptional in black people
[4, 5]. Type II is the most frequently reported type (80%). Type III and
IV of PPV are rare; only a few cases are described in the literature.
The real incidence of PPV is difficult to evaluate because most of cases
without visceral involvement are rarely published. In a study of 306 new-borns,
Prigent et al. emphasized the underestimation of PPV after observing
three cases in children originating from Sri Lanka, and born into three
different families [6].
In Hasegawa's classification, it is unclear if the term "nevus spilus"
refers to a uniformly pigmented macular lesion as originally described
[7], or if it is considered as "spots on a spot", also called "speckled
lentiginous nevus" [8]. It seems that in Japanese literature, this lesion
is a uniformly pigmented macule ("tache café au lait"). On the
other hand, cases of PPV recently reported with "nevus spilus" involve
patients with extensive "spots on a spot" [9, 10]. It might be necessary
to clarify the terminology, and we suggest that the term "nevus spilus"
should be replaced by either "spots on a spot" or "café au lait
spot". In such conditions, classification can be discussed: type III of
PPV may correspond to an association of nevus flammeus with "spots on
a spot", with or without nevus anemicus. Type IV would be a type III with
aberrant mongolian spot. A new type (type V) of PPV could be introduced
in this classification, defined by "café au lait spot", nevus flammeus
with or without nevus anemicus. These findings have practical interest
because malignant transformation of "spots on a spot" may occur, so patients
with type III and IV of PPV should be kept under regular observation [11].
Visceral involvement is present in half of the cases of types II, III
and IV, most of them being characterized by a complex angiodysplasia as
Klippel-Trenaunay or/and Sturge-Weber syndrome. There is no report of
systemic involvement in type I. It is not clear whether some patients
presenting with others visceral abnormalities could be include in the
"b" subtype. For example, a Japanese girl with nevus flammeus, extensive
nevus spilus, aberrant mongolian spots and colonic polyposis has been
described [12]. An East Indian child with Klippel-Trenaunay and Sturge-Weber
syndrome, extensive mongolian spots, hypoplastic larynx and subglottic
stenosis has been reported [13]. A selective IgA deficiency was also noted
in a child with PPV type IIb [14]. Kaise et al. described a case
of PPV accompanied by oesophageal varices due to hypoplasia of the portal
veins [15]. These various conditions may represent incidental findings,
or possible associations.
Various ophthalmologic manifestations have been
described in PPV: vascular abnormalities can be present, as in Sturge-Weber
syndrome (retinal, choroidal or iris hemangiomas, glaucoma, buphthalmos).
Pigmentary disorders such as scleral melanosis, nevus of Ota and nevus
of Ito are also frequently reported, as in our second patient. In the
general population, only 5 to 10% present a bilateral nevus of Ota. By
contrast, in PPV, patients with ocular pigmentary disorders more often
than not have bilateral features. The complications of nevus of Ota are
glaucoma and melanoma. Malignant transformation has been reported in more
than 60 cases [16]. This is the reason why ophthalmological examination
in these patients must be performed.
Except for vascular and pigmentary disorders, other ophthalmologic abnormalities
may occur. Three cases of multiple iris hamartomas have been reported
in patients with PPV type IIb: a 5-year-old girl with bilateral scleral
melanosis and iris hamartomas [17], a 5-year-old girl with glaucoma, bilateral
melanosis oculi and iris mammillations that were initially thought to
be Lisch nodules [18], and a 2-year-old Brazilian boy with seizures and
iris nodules [19].
In our first patient, the cranial abnormalities, particularly the diploë
enlargment and the skull bone defect with brain hernia are unlikely to
be related to PPV. Indeed, these findings may be observed in patients
affected by thalassemia [20], as was our patient in whom a minor beta
thalassemia was discovered.
Arnold-Chiari malformation has, to our knowledge, never been described
with PPV. This congenital hindbrain deformity results from embryological
alterations occurring during the fourth week of gestation, and affecting
closure of the neural tube [21].
The pathogenesis of PPV remains controversial. Embryogenesis alterations
occurring at the end of the first month of gestation, and affecting melanocytic
migration and vascular development have been proposed [22]. Recently,
the genetic concept of twin spots to explain the association of vascular
and pigmentary abnormalities has been suggested: two different recessive
mutations could be present on each chromosome of the same pair, on different
loci, one for the pigmented lesions and the other for the vascular lesions.
The embryo having each mutation in the heterozygous state has no clinical
manifestation. But during embryogenesis, some somatic crossing over could
occur with a mitotic recombination, resulting in homozygous cell populations
in different areas leading to a mongolian spot or a nevus flammeus [23].
The fact that PPV and Arnold-Chiari malformation both result from disturbances
occurring during the same embryological period leads us to think that
this association is not coincidental.
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