ARTICLE
A five-year-old Lybian girl presented with an obscure hair problem. At
birth she had some fuzzy hair. This was lost within a few weeks after
birth and not replaced by terminal hair. Since then she has been almost
devoid of scalp and body hair, with the exception of sparse eyebrows and
eyelashes (Figs. 1 and
2).
Atrichia with papular lesions
Hair was present at birth followed by an almost complete shedding with
permanent absence of hair.
On physical examination the five-year-old girl appeared to be healthy
with the exception of an almost complete hairlessness involving both scalp
and body. When looking closely you find a nodule on the vertex (Fig.
1) and skin-colored papules surrounding the eyes were seen (Fig.
2). Moreover there were multiple skin-colored papules in other regions
of the body. The toenails were also of yellowish hue (Figs.
3 and 4).
A biopsy of a papule of the left knee showed an acanthotic epidermis
with orthohyperkeratosis above a dermal cyst containing horny and amorphous
material (Fig. 5). On top of it there were eccrine
sweat glands.
Histological findings revealed the complete absence of normal hair follicle
structures, which were replaced by residual epithelial cell conglomerates
and large dermal cysts.
When looking at the family history there were neither hair nor skin
anomalies found. The parents of our patient were cousins and the grandmothers
were sisters.
On the basis of these findings we established the diagnosis of atrichia
with papular lesions (MIM no. 209 505).
Comment
In 1954, Damsté and Prakken [1] first used this term for three
patients showing atrichia with multiple follicular keratinous cysts. Loewenthal
and Prakken [2] reported a similar case in 1961, and additional reports
followed [3-8].
Atrichia with papular lesions is a rare disorder of hair development,
characterized by almost complete absence of hair shortly after birth because
the lanugo hair is not replaced by terminal hair. In three cases the children
were already hairless at birth [4].
Atrichia is associated with numerous papular lesions developing during
the first two decades life. These lesions are cystic hamartomas originating
from hair follicles and they mainly involve the face and neck [10]. Usually
there are no other physical or mental abnormalities, although some cases
with physical or mental retardation have been reported [3-5].
A differential diagnosis may be alopecia areata of the universalis type,
where children are also born with hair and may already lose all of their
hair within the first weeks or months of life.
Atrichia with papular lesions is an autosomal recessive trait caused
by mutations in the hairless gene that maps on chromosome 8p12 [7, 11].
It encodes a putative transcription factor with restricted expression
in the brain and skin, which is involved in the regulation of apoptosis
during catagen remodeling in the hair cycle [6].
Interestingly, the hairless mouse has for many years been proposed as
an animal model for atrichia with papular lesions [9]. The homology has
now been proven at the molecular level [6].
According to the present knowledge it is not possible to stimulate hair
growth in this disease.
References
1. Damsté S, Prakken JR. Atrichia with papular lesions;
a variant of congenital ectodermal dysplasia. Dermatologica 1954;
108: 114-21.
2. Loewenthal JA, Prakken JR. Atrichia with papular lesions.
Dermatologica 1961; 122: 85-9.
3. Del Castillo V, Ruiz-Maldonado R, Carnevale A. Atrichia with
papular lesions and mental retardation in two sisters. Int J Dermatol
1974; 13: 261-5.
4. Czarnecki N, Stingl G. Atrichia congenita mit Hornzysten.
Variante einer ektodermalen Dysplasie. Z Hautkr 1980; 55: 210-7.
5. Kruse F, Cichon S, Anker M, Hillmer AM, Barros-Nunez P, Cantu
JM, Leal E, Weinlich G, Schmuth M, Fritsch P, Ruzicka T, Propping P, Nöthen
MM. Novel hairless mutations in two kindreds with autosomal recessive
papular atrichia. J Invest Dermatol 1999: 954-9.
6. Aita VM, Ahmad W, Pantleyev AA, Kozlowska U, Kozlowska A,
Gilliam TC, Jablonska S, Christiano AM. A novel missense mutation (C622G)
in the zinc-finger domain of the human hairless gene associated with congenital
atrichia with papular lesions. Exp Dermatol 2000; 9: 157-62.
7. Ahmad W, Irvine AD, Lam H, Buckley C, Bingham EA, Panteleyev
AA, McGrath JA, Christiano AM. A missense mutation in the zinc-finger
domain of the human hairless gene underlies congenital atrichia in a family
of Irish travellers. Am J Hum Genet 1998; 63: 984-91.
8. Ahmad W, Zlotogorski A, Panteleyev AA, Lam HM, Ahmad M, Haque
MF, Abdallah HM, Dragan L, Christiano AM. Genomic organization of the
human hairless gene (hr) and identification of a mutation underlying congenital
atrichia in an Arab Palestinian family. Genomics 1999; 56: 141-8.
9. Sundberg JP, King LE Jr. Mouse models for the study of human
hair loss. Dermatol Clin 1996; 14: 619-32.
10. Happle R. Genetic defects involving the hair. In: Orfanos
CE, Happle R (Eds.). Hair and hair diseases. Springer. New York, Berlin,
Heidelberg 1990: 336.
11. Cichon S, Anker M, Vogt IR, Rohleder H, Putzstuck M, Hillmer
A, Faro KS, Ahmad M, Haque S, Rietschel M, Propping P, Kruse R, Nöthen
M. Cloning, genomic organization, alternative transcripts and mutation
analysis of the gene responsible for autosomal recessive universal alopecia.
Hum Mol Genet 1998; 7: 1671-9.

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Figure 1. Complete hairlessness of the scalp.
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Figure 2. Sparse
eyebrows and lashes. |
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Figure 3. Multiple skin-colored papules on the knees.
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Figure 4. Multiple
skin-colored papules on the dorsal aspect of the feet. The toenails
show a yellowish hoe. |
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Figure 5. Biopsy
of a papule of the lef knee: acanthotic epidermis with orthohyperkeratosis
above a cyst containing horny and amorphous material. |
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