Cervigón-González Iván, Manzanares Francisco Javier, Bahillo Constanza, López-Barrantes Oliva, García-Almagro Domingo
Servicio de Dermatología, Hospital Virgen Salud, Toledo, España.
Actas Dermosifiliogr. 2006 Oct;97(8):514-7. doi: 10.1016/s0001-7310(06)73453-6.
Epithelial mucinosis (follicular mucinosis) is a reactive histological pattern characterized by the accumulation of mucin in the infundibular, follicular, and sebaceous epithelium, that may occur in multiple skin conditions and cannot be considered a specific disease. Alopecia mucinosa is a clinicopathological entity with distinctive skin lesions, mucin deposits in the hair follicles and periadnexal lymphoid infiltrates. Three types of mucinous alopecia have been described: idiopathic, persistent or benign chronic, and associated to lymphoma. For some authors, these types of mucinous alopecia are not independent diseases, but rather represent variants of mycosis fungoides with epithelial mucinosis.