Cutaneous Features of Neurofibromatosis
Sang-Eun Kim , BSc, MSc,1 Joseph M. Lam, MD, FRCPC,2
1Faulty of Medicine, University of British Columbia, BC.
2Assistant Clinical Professor, Department of Paediatrics, Associate Member, Department of Dermatology, University of British Columbia, BC.
CLINICAL TOOLS
| Clinical diagnosis of NF1 requires the presence of at least 2 out of the 7 criteria. |
| Not all patients with café-au-lait spots will have NF1. |
| Axillary and inguinal freckling are the most specific criteria for NF1. |
| Three different types of cutaneous neurofibromas are dermal, subcutaneous, and plexiform neurofibromas (PNs). PNs can become malignant. |
| Juvenile xanthogranuloma and nevus anemicus are uncommon associated cutaneous features of NF1. |
| NF1 is a genetic disorder and there is no cure. |
| Patients should be routinely monitored for rare complications and annual exam should include BP measurement, skin and bone abnormality assessment, visual acuity checks, and ophthalmological evaluations. |
| Not all Cafe-au-lait spots require specialist referral however early recognition and prompt referral is essential. |
| To have access to full article that these tools were developed for, please subscribe. The cost to subscribe is $80 USD per year and you will gain full access to all the premium content on www.healthplexus.net, an educational portal, that hosts 1000s of clinical reviews, case studies, educational visual aids and more as well as within the mobile app. |


