Pilomatricoma of the elbow
Youssef El Hassnaoui, Abdelaziz E L Ansari, Mohamed Tazi, Ahmed El Ghazzal, Hamza Madani, Issam Boulazaib, Hicham Ait Benali, Mohammed Shimi

TL;DR
A 31-year-old man had a rare, large pilomatricoma on his elbow, successfully treated with surgery and no recurrence after a year.
Contribution
Reports a rare case of pilomatricoma in the elbow with successful treatment and follow-up.
Findings
Pilomatricoma was located on the posterolateral aspect of the right elbow.
Complete surgical excision and skin grafting led to no local recurrence after 12 months.
The case highlights the importance of considering rare locations for pilomatricoma.
Abstract
Pilomatricoma is a common benign skin tumor of follicular origin, occurring mainly in the head and neck region. However, less common locations, such as the arm or elbow, can also be observed. Definitive diagnosis is based on histopathological examination, and standard treatment consists of complete surgical excision of the lesion. We report the case of a 31-year-old man with a pilomatricoma located on the posterolateral aspect of the right elbow, which had been evolving for 2 years. After surgical excision under locoregional anesthesia followed by thin skin grafting, no signs of local recurrence were observed after 12 months' follow-up. This case is particularly interesting because of the rare location and large size of the tumor in the elbow.
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Taxonomy
TopicsCancer and Skin Lesions · Nonmelanoma Skin Cancer Studies
