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Autosomal dominant genodermatoses in adults being heralded by superimposed skin lesions in children.

In autosomal dominant skin disorders, pronounced mosaic involvement may sometimes occur in the neonate, originating in a heterozygous embryo from early loss of heterozygosity, probably during the first week after fertilization. In biallelic phenotypes, such overlaying mosaic involvement may coexist with disseminated mosaicism, for example, in neurofibromatosis or tuberous sclerosis. In other phenotypes, however, classical nonsegmental involvement tends to appear much later, which is why the superimposed mosaic is a heralding feature. In Brooke-Spiegler syndrome (eccrine cylindromatosis), a large pedigree documented a 5-year-old boy with multiple, congenital small eccrine cylindromas along the lines of Blaschko. Disseminated cylindromas were absent because they usually appear in adulthood. ̶ In Hornstein-Knickenberg syndrome, an affected woman had an 8-year-old son with a nevus comedonicus-like lesion exemplifying a forerunner of the syndrome. ("Birt-Hogg-Dubé syndrome" represents a nonsyndromic type of hereditary perifollicular fibromas.) In glomangiomatosis, neonatal superimposed mosaicism is a heralding feature because disseminated lesions appear during puberty or adulthood. Linear porokeratosis is a harbinger of disseminated porokeratosis that develops 30 or 40 years later. ̶ Cases of superimposed linear Darier disease were forerunners of nonsegmental manifestation. ̶ In a case of Hailey-Hailey disease, neonatal mosaic lesions heralded nonsegmental involvement that began 22 years later.

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