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Nail Tumors

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Nail Anatomy & Tumor Intro - Nail It Down!

  • Nail Unit Components:
    • Nail Plate: Hard, keratinized structure.
    • Nail Bed: Vascular tissue, beneath plate.
    • Nail Matrix: Germinal tissue, forms plate. Lunula is visible part.
    • Nail Folds: Proximal (PNF), Lateral (LNF). Eponychium (cuticle) protects.
    • Hyponychium: Under distal free edge, forms a seal.
  • Nail Tumors:
    • Can be benign or malignant growths.
    • Arise from any nail unit structure.
    • Biopsy is key for accurate diagnosis. Anatomy of the human nail unit

⭐ Longitudinal melanonychia in adults, especially if new, wide (>3 mm), or irregular, warrants biopsy to rule out melanoma.

Benign Nail Tumors - Gentle Giants

  • Glomus Tumor:
    • Painful (paroxysmal, cold-sensitive), bluish-red nodule under nail.
    • Hildreth's sign: pain relief with tourniquet.
    • Love's sign: point tenderness.
    • X-ray: well-defined erosion of distal phalanx.
  • Myxoid Cyst (Mucous Cyst):
    • Translucent, gelatinous papule/nodule near proximal nail fold (PNF) or DIP joint.
    • May cause longitudinal nail groove.
    • Associated with osteoarthritis.
  • Onychopapilloma:
    • Presents as longitudinal erythronychia, melanonychia, or leukonychia.
    • May cause distal V-shaped split or subungual hyperkeratosis.
    • Originates from nail matrix or bed.
  • Fibromas (Periungual/Subungual):
    • Flesh-colored, firm papules.
    • Koenen tumors: pathognomonic for Tuberous Sclerosis (multiple periungual fibromas).
    • Can distort nail plate.

Glomus tumors are notorious for the classic triad: severe pain, localized tenderness, and cold sensitivity.

Malignant Nail Tumors - Bad to the Bone

  • Squamous Cell Carcinoma (SCC)
    • Most common nail malignancy.
    • Risks: HPV (16, 18), chronic trauma, radiation, immunosuppression.
    • Appears as: Persistent warty, ulcerative, or destructive lesion; often painful, may bleed.
    • May show bone erosion on X-ray.
    • Dx: Biopsy (full-thickness nail bed).
    • Tx: Mohs surgery, wide local excision, amputation if bone involved.
  • Melanoma (Subungual)
    • Acral lentiginous melanoma is the most common histological type.
    • Key sign: New/changing longitudinal melanonychia (band width >3mm, irregular borders/color, proximal widening, nail dystrophy).
    • Hutchinson’s sign: Periungual spread of pigment onto nail fold skin.
    • 📌 ABCDEF rule for suspicion: Age (peak 50-70 yrs), Black/Brown Band ≥3mm or Borders irregular, Change in band or lack of Change with prior ineffective treatment, Digit most common (thumb/hallux > index), Extension of pigment to skin (Hutchinson's sign), Family/personal history of melanoma.
    • Dx: Biopsy (nail matrix).
    • Tx: Wide surgical excision or amputation, sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB) based on thickness.

Nail Melanoma Clinical and Dermoscopic Views

⭐ Hutchinson's sign (pigment spread to the proximal or lateral nail folds) is a key clinical finding highly suspicious for subungual melanoma and warrants urgent biopsy.

Diagnosis & Red Flags - Spot the Suspect

  • Assessment: History (onset, changes, symptoms, trauma, relevant cancer history). Clinical exam (morphology, color, size, nail plate integrity, periungual skin).

  • Diagnostic Tools:

    • Dermoscopy (Onychoscopy): Crucial for pigmented lesions (distinguish nevi vs melanoma) & vascular patterns.
      • Melanonychia: Irregular lines (color, spacing, thickness), micro-Hutchinson's.
    • Biopsy: Gold standard. Nail matrix biopsy for longitudinal melanonychia; consider type.
    • Imaging: X-ray (bone erosion); MRI/USG (soft tissue extent).
  • Red Flags ⚠️ - Suspect Malignancy:

    • ABCDEF Rule (Nail Melanoma):
      • Age (50-70), African/Asian.
      • Band (brown-black), Breadth >3mm / irregular Borders.
      • Change in band (rapid growth/darkening).
      • Digit (thumb, hallux, index; single).
      • Extension (Hutchinson’s sign).
      • Family/personal hx melanoma.
    • Nail destruction, ulceration, bleeding.
    • Rapid growth, unexplained pain.

⭐ Hutchinson's sign (periungual pigmentation) is a critical warning for subungual melanoma.

Subungual melanoma with Hutchinson's sign

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Glomus tumor: Most common benign, intensely painful (cold-sensitive), bluish-red spot.
  • Squamous Cell Carcinoma (SCC): Most common malignant, often warty/ulcerative, linked to HPV.
  • Subungual Melanoma: Presents as longitudinal melanonychia; Hutchinson's sign (periungual pigmentation) is crucial.
  • Onychomatricoma: Benign, causes thickened yellow nail with longitudinal splinter hemorrhages/cavities.
  • Subungual Exostosis: Benign bony growth, often post-traumatic, confirmed by X-ray.
  • Myxoid (Mucous) Cyst: Translucent papule near DIP, can cause nail groove.

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