Neurocutaneous melanosis: report of three cases and up-to-date review.

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Neurocutaneous melanosis: report of three cases and up-to-date review. / Pavlidou, Efterpi; Hagel, Christian; Papavasilliou, Antigoni; Giouroukos, Sotiris; Panteliadis, Christos.

In: J CHILD NEUROL, Vol. 23, No. 12, 12, 2008, p. 1382-1391.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Pavlidou, E, Hagel, C, Papavasilliou, A, Giouroukos, S & Panteliadis, C 2008, 'Neurocutaneous melanosis: report of three cases and up-to-date review.', J CHILD NEUROL, vol. 23, no. 12, 12, pp. 1382-1391. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19073843?dopt=Citation>

APA

Pavlidou, E., Hagel, C., Papavasilliou, A., Giouroukos, S., & Panteliadis, C. (2008). Neurocutaneous melanosis: report of three cases and up-to-date review. J CHILD NEUROL, 23(12), 1382-1391. [12]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19073843?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Pavlidou E, Hagel C, Papavasilliou A, Giouroukos S, Panteliadis C. Neurocutaneous melanosis: report of three cases and up-to-date review. J CHILD NEUROL. 2008;23(12):1382-1391. 12.

Bibtex

@article{7e1c454d7adb4be8b9b0ca782e388ade,
title = "Neurocutaneous melanosis: report of three cases and up-to-date review.",
abstract = "Neurocutaneous melanosis is a rare noninherited embryonic neuroectodermal dysplasia, which is observed sporadically and never affects the entire integument. The hallmark of neurocutaneous melanosis in the neonatal period is the presence of a large bilateral hairy dark nevus with satellite nevi over the trunk and neck. The diagnosis should be considered in neonates with large pigmented nevi and in those with more than 3 hairy dark nevi regardless of their size. Neonates with neurocutaneous melanosis are at risk of developing neurological problems. The most common neurological complications are hydrocephalus, seizures, cranial nerve dysfunction, and signs of spinal cord and root involvement. The authors report 3 cases of histologically confirmed neurocutaneous melanosis and describe the course of neurological symptoms and clinical findings including cognitive tests and neuroimaging. The case reports are complemented by an up-to date review on this clinical entity.",
author = "Efterpi Pavlidou and Christian Hagel and Antigoni Papavasilliou and Sotiris Giouroukos and Christos Panteliadis",
year = "2008",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "23",
pages = "1382--1391",
journal = "J CHILD NEUROL",
issn = "0883-0738",
publisher = "SAGE Publications",
number = "12",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Neurocutaneous melanosis: report of three cases and up-to-date review.

AU - Pavlidou, Efterpi

AU - Hagel, Christian

AU - Papavasilliou, Antigoni

AU - Giouroukos, Sotiris

AU - Panteliadis, Christos

PY - 2008

Y1 - 2008

N2 - Neurocutaneous melanosis is a rare noninherited embryonic neuroectodermal dysplasia, which is observed sporadically and never affects the entire integument. The hallmark of neurocutaneous melanosis in the neonatal period is the presence of a large bilateral hairy dark nevus with satellite nevi over the trunk and neck. The diagnosis should be considered in neonates with large pigmented nevi and in those with more than 3 hairy dark nevi regardless of their size. Neonates with neurocutaneous melanosis are at risk of developing neurological problems. The most common neurological complications are hydrocephalus, seizures, cranial nerve dysfunction, and signs of spinal cord and root involvement. The authors report 3 cases of histologically confirmed neurocutaneous melanosis and describe the course of neurological symptoms and clinical findings including cognitive tests and neuroimaging. The case reports are complemented by an up-to date review on this clinical entity.

AB - Neurocutaneous melanosis is a rare noninherited embryonic neuroectodermal dysplasia, which is observed sporadically and never affects the entire integument. The hallmark of neurocutaneous melanosis in the neonatal period is the presence of a large bilateral hairy dark nevus with satellite nevi over the trunk and neck. The diagnosis should be considered in neonates with large pigmented nevi and in those with more than 3 hairy dark nevi regardless of their size. Neonates with neurocutaneous melanosis are at risk of developing neurological problems. The most common neurological complications are hydrocephalus, seizures, cranial nerve dysfunction, and signs of spinal cord and root involvement. The authors report 3 cases of histologically confirmed neurocutaneous melanosis and describe the course of neurological symptoms and clinical findings including cognitive tests and neuroimaging. The case reports are complemented by an up-to date review on this clinical entity.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 23

SP - 1382

EP - 1391

JO - J CHILD NEUROL

JF - J CHILD NEUROL

SN - 0883-0738

IS - 12

M1 - 12

ER -