Acta Dermato-Venereologica issue 50:1 98-1CompleteContent | Page 25
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CLINICAL REPORT
Distinct Patterns and Aetiology of Chromonychia
Soo Hyeon BAE, Lee Min YOUNG and Jee-Bum LEE
Department of Dermatology, Chonnam National University Medical School, Gwangju, South Korea
Abnormal colouring of the nails may be a sign of un-
derlying systemic or local disorders. This study in-
vestigated the prevalence and causes of chromonychia
as a whole, as well as of each subtype. Among 163
patients with chromonychia, trauma was the patho-
genesis in up to 20.9% (34/163) of cases. The most
common subtype was melanonychia (54.0%; 88/163),
followed by leukonychia (23.9%), red (8.6%), green
(6.7%), yellow (4.9%) and blue (1.8%) nails. Nail
matrix naevus (33.3%; 29/88) was the most common
cause of melanonychia, while skin diseases (41.0%;
16/39), such as psoriasis (75%, 12/16) and alopecia
areata (18.8%; 3/16), in addition to systemic diseases
(33.3%; 13/39) including anaemia (38.5%, 5/13) and
chronic renal failure (15.4%; 2/13) were the dominant
causes of leukonychia. As chromonychia may be the
first or only sign of an underlying disorder, it should
alert physicians and patients to the need for a prompt
and thorough evaluation.
Key words: green nail; leukonychia; melanonychia; nail disco-
loration; internal medicine; skin disease.
Accepted Sep 13, 2017; Epub ahead of print Sep 13, 2017
Acta Derm Venereol 2018; 98: 108–113.
Corr: Jee-Bum Lee, Department of Dermatology, Chonnam National
University Medical School, 160 Baekseo-ro, Dong-gu, Gwangju, 61469,
South Korea. E mail: [email protected]
C
hromonychia is an abnormality in the colour of the
nail plate or subungual tissue. Common patterns
of nail discoloration include black, white, red, green,
blue, and yellow dyschromias (1). Interestingly, these
nail discolorations can be useful as diagnostic clues to
underlying issues, such as skin or systemic diseases,
drug exposure, benign or malignant tumours, associated
trauma, infections, and exogenous agents (1, 2). As the
number of patients with chromonychia visiting derma-
tological clinics increases, a diagnostic algorithm for the
disease is required.
The aim of the present study was to evaluate the epi-
demiology and aetiology of chromonychia in Korean
patients. While previous reports have focused on each
entity individually, especially melanonychia (3, 4), we
analysed the prevalence and causes of nail discoloration
as a whole as well as for individual entities. In our study,
chromonychia was considered a unique category diffe-
rent from onychomycosis and therefore fungal infection
was excluded.
doi: 10.2340/00015555-2798
Acta Derm Venereol 2018; 98: 108–113
METHODS
Study design
This retrospective study included 163 patients with chromo-
nychia who visited Chonnam National University Hospital,
Gwangju, South Korea from January 2003 to December 2016.
From medical records data were extracted and assessed regarding
patients’ demographic characteristics (age and sex), relevant
medical history (related systemic or skin diseases and medica-
tion), trauma history, physical findings (colour, affected number,
site, and pattern), infection (bacterial and fungal cultures) and
exogenous agents that were applied. Because of the risk of nail
deformity, histopathological examination was only performed
for 50 patients when clinical findings were indicative of malig-
nant or benign tumour or when patients were anxious about the
possibility of malignancy and requested a nail unit biopsy. This
retrospective study was approved by the institutional review
boards of the participating hospital.
Definition and classification of chromonychia
Melanonychia is defined as a deposition of brown or black pig-
ment in the nail plate from increased pigment production within
the nail matrix (5). Patients with melanonychia were subdivided
depending on the width of the band: less than 3 mm, 3 mm to
less than 6 mm, 6 mm or wider, and total nail plate involvement.
Leukonychia is defined as an opaque white discoloration of nail
(1). It is classified as true or apparent, depending on whether
the origin is in the nail matrix or nail bed. True leukonychia
is further divided into total, subtotal, punctate, transverse, and
longitudinal subtypes depending on the extent and pattern of
involvement. Pseudoleukonychia, in which the abnormality is
not derived from the matrix or the nail bed, mainly caused by
onychomycosis, was not included in our study. Other patients
with chromonychia were categorized into red, green, blue, and
yellow nail groups according to nail colour.
RESULTS
Chromonychia
A total of 163 patients with chromonychia visited our
department. Their mean age was 43.0 ± 21.9 years. There
were 70 males and 93 females, a male:female ratio of
0.75:1. The specific presentations and causes of chromo-
nychia are detailed in Table I.
Melanonychia
Eighty-eight patients (55.3%; 88/163) had melanony-
chia, mean age 43.6 ± 23.8 years. There were 34 males
and 54 females, a male:female ratio of 0.6:1. The causes
of melanonychia are detailed in Table II. The causes
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Journal Compilation © 2018 Acta Dermato-Venereologica.