Book Review | Dermatol Pract Concept 2011;1(1):18 85 Book Review: Rongioletti F, Smoller BR (eds.). Clinical and Pathological Aspects of Skin Diseases in Endocrine, Metabolic, Nutritional and Deposition Disease. New York: Springer; 2010. Reviews by Christine Ko, M.D. and François Milette, M.D. with response from the authors Editorial comment by Mark A. Hurt, M.D., Book Review Editor Citation: Book review: Clinical and Pathological Aspects of Skin Diseases in Endocrine, Metabolic, Nutritional and Deposition Disease. New York: Springer, 2010. Dermatol Pract Concept 2011;1(1):18. http://dx.doi.org/10.5826/dpc.0101a18. Copyright: ©2011 Hurt et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. Corresponding author: Mark A. Hurt, MD., 226 Millpark Dr., Maryland Heights, Mo, 63043. Tel. 314.991.4470. Email: MarkHurt@aol.com. review by Christine Ko, m.D. This is an ambitious undertaking, as suggested by the lengthy title, and the authors successfully cover endocrine, metabolic, nutritional, and deposition disorders. The book is all the more thorough as there is seamless assimilation of clinical, histologic, and radiologic information for these diseases. The aims are fulfilled with 1) concise text, 2) atlas-like inclusion of over 174 clinical photos and 116 histopathologic pho- tomicrographs, 3) insight into the clinical appearance and course of disease, 4) detailed histopathologic descriptions, 5) therapeutic options, and 6) bulleted key points. This book should appeal to all dermatopathologists, as it is compact, richly illustrated, and easy to read. Some minor criticisms include a need for white balanc- ing many of the histopathologic photomicrographs and for improvement of brightness and color of the clinical photo- graphs. Despite this, the figures more than adequately depict the numerous diseases summarized in this book. In particu- lar, some of the images not to be missed include beautiful clinical examples of necrobiosis lipoidica (Fig. 2.1), pretibial myxedema (plaque-type) (Fig. 3.2), acromegaly (Fig. 4.1), eruptive xanthoma (Fig. 6.4), fixed drug (Fig. 14.6), and primary systemic amyloidosis (Fig. 17.4). This atlas further delves into variants of granuloma annulare (chapter 2), pre- tibial myxedema (chapter 3), xanthomas (chapter 6), and mucinoses (chapter 18). While this is a strength, it also is a minor weakness, as the appetite is whetted to see even more images of rare variants like discrete papular lichen myxede- matosus and pure nodular lichen myxedematosus. The authors are recognized experts in the subjects cov- ered in this book, and even while achieving their broad aims, the authors include valuable pearls throughout the text. rongioletti F, smoller Br (eds.). Clinical and Pathological aspects of skin Diseases in endocrine, metabolic, Nutritional and Deposition Disease. New york: springer; 2010. 195 pp with index. IsBN 978-1-60761-180-6. Dermatology PrACTICAL & CoNCEPTUAL www.derm101.com 86 Book Review | Dermatol Pract Concept 2011;1(1):18 review by François milette, mD This book is presented to its reader as “a concise atlas and text for the practicing dermatologist, pathologist, dermato- pathologist, endocrinologist, and internist.” In this context, what should we expect from it? Certainly an atlas should be complete and well-illus- trated, whereas a text (or textbook) should be clearly and logically written. If it meets those requirements, it has a chance of being practically useful. Last – and this is related to completeness of covering of the subject – to be worth its price, it should add to what is available in other textbooks already published. Therefore, I have retained three criteria to evaluate in my review of this book: completeness, image quality, and logic and clarity of the approach presented. Concerning completeness, suffice it to say that an atlas pertaining to, among other things, metabolic diseases with cutaneous manifestations should include lysosomal diseases (mucolipidoses, glycogenoses, sphingolipidoses, cystinosis, etc.) that do not appear in this book but can be found in other textbooks [1], therefore more complete at least on this point. Those diseases are extremely rare, of course, but this is no excuse to neglect them, as lipoid proteinosis, which is discussed at length in a chapter devoted to it alone in this book, can hardly be considered frequent. As for the quality of the images, great efforts have been made to include numerous clinical photographs and his- tological microphotographs. The quality of these images, however, is very unequal. Some are crystal clear but, unfor- tunately, others are suboptimal and look as if they had been taken through filters of various colors: blue, green, yellow, pink, etc. With the technology available today, it should have been relatively easy to standardize the quality of the images. one wonders, by the way, why the photograph on page 185 occupies the whole page and is the only photograph in the whole book to do so. Concerning the logic of the approach, things start badly, as no introduction is offered to define the various catego- ries of diseases discussed in the book. one may argue that everybody knows what endocrine, metabolic, nutritional, and deposition diseases are, but the authors themselves admit rightly that the categories as they use it are not exclu- sive, therefore questioning the pertinence of their enterprise. Moreover, the warning placed in the preface that some diseases will appear in more than one category made this reader uneasy and suggests that some confusion exists in the organization of this book. For me, this was confirmed by the reading of it, which I found very hard to complete. The authors suggest that that hormones and nutrition influence metabolism profoundly and any “deposition” is the result of faulty metabolism, the incapacity to catabolize the material Some involve differentiating certain disorders: for example, acne secondary to hypercorticism lacks comedones and cysts (unlike acne vulgaris), siderosis around eccrine glands may be specific for idiopathic hemochromatosis, and the linear array of papules is a clue for scleromyxedema as opposed to scleredema or scleroderma. A treatment pearl is using the hyperpigmentation of Addison disease to monitor disease activity. As the authors’ expertise shines through with com- prehensive coverage of the myriad diseases, it would be of value to know their opinion on issues like: A) Lichen myxedematosus – how frequently is it asso- ciated with paraproteinemia or other systemic findings [1]? Should all cases be screened and, if so, just once? B) reticular erythematous mucinosis – the literature sug- gests many cases are associated with autoimmune disorders [2]. Is the author’s experience different? C) Calciphylaxis – how often is it not in the setting of renal failure [3, 4]? Is there a better prognosis if not truncal? overall, this book succinctly achieves a wide-ranging look at endocrine, metabolic, nutritional, and deposition disease. Concise text accompanies numerous photographs and photomicrographs, enabling the reader to get a handle on these diseases clinically and histopathologically. This is a worthy read for anyone interested in these disorders. Dr. Ko is an Associate Professor of Dermatology at Yale University Dermatopathology, New Haven, CT, USA. Con- tact her at christine.ko@yale.edu. references 1. Wang P, Yang H, ran Y. Localized papular mucinosis with IgA ne- phropathy: a case report. Arch Dermatol 2011;147(5):599-602. PubMed PMID: 21576580. 2. Kreuter A, Scola N, Tigges C, Altmeyer P, Gambichler T. Clini- cal features and efficacy of antimalarial treatment for reticular erythematous mucinosis: a case series of 11 patients. Arch Der- matol 2011;147(6):710-5. Epub 2011 Feb 21. PubMed PMID: 21339419. 3. Harris rJ, Cropley TG. Possible role of hypercoagulability in calciphylaxis: review of the literature. J Am Acad Dermatol 2011;64(2):405-12. Epub 2010 Aug 12. review. PubMed PMID: 20708299. 4. Swanson AM, Desai Sr, Jackson JD, Andea AA, Hughey LC. Calciphylaxis associated with chronic inflammatory conditions, immunosuppression therapy, and normal renal function: a report of 2 cases. Arch Dermatol 2009;145(6):723-5. PubMed PMID: 19528437. Book Review | Dermatol Pract Concept 2011;1(1):18 87 deposited. Therefore, the inclusion of the entities discussed in one or another category can only be arbitrary, and it is. one of the consequences that results from classifying into undefined and overlapping categories is that some diseases are classified in a manner that appears simply nonsensical to a naïve reader. If hyperlipidemia is easily understood as a metabolic disease resulting from inherited or toxic faulty metabolism of lipids, it is hard to understand how obesity can be included in the same group of diseases and not con- sidered nutritional! Isn’t obesity the stereotypical example of nutritional disease, or does it result, as in the mind of the authors, from a faulty metabolism? And what about glucagonoma syndrome (GS) and necro- lytic migratory erythema (NME)? Glucagonoma is a neo- plasm and, therefore, logically, GS and NME, the physiopa- thology of which is unknown, are classical paraneoplastic syndromes as the authors themselves admit in the very first sentence of their chapter 16. So why do they discuss it as a nutritional disease? And why isn’t glucagonoma discussed in the chapter on endocrine or pancreatic diseases or, if need be, as a “metabolic” disease? This book raises more problems than it offers solutions, and many, many other questions could be enumerated here, but this is only a book review and no place for such lengthy development. In this work, the authors place the Latin phrase, repetita iuvant, repetition is useful. By this, they want to justify the presence of some entities in more than one chapter as intended to offer “different perspectives.” It is not, however, repetition to which the reader is exposed; it is to redundancy and to arbitrary, incomplete and fairly illogical classification of rare diseases. After going through this book, my compre- hension of the subjects addressed by it was not made clearer, and in response to the use of the Latin phrase repetita iuvant, I would say that if it is true that repeating the same phone number three times helps in remembering it, three different numbers told in a row are certainly not easier to learn. Lastly, the very title of this book sounds bizarre: Clinical and pathological aspects of skin diseases [sic] in endocrine, metabolic, nutritional and deposition disease [sic]. In short: diseases in disease. one immediately feels uneasy. If some enti- ties described, for instance, necrobiosis lipoidica, are indeed diseases of their own that may occur alone or in association with another disease (in this case diabetes), others can simply not be described as diseases. Mucinosis and calcinosis, for example, are not diseases but histopathologic patterns occur- ring in many different contexts, e.g., neoplastic, endocrine, inflammatory, etc. It is no surprise; therefore, that confusion arises from the reading of this book confounding diseases and patterns. A more adequate title could have read Cutane- ous manifestations of endocrine, metabolic, nutritional and deposition diseases: Clinical and pathological aspects and perhaps would have helped the work to be more coherent. Dr. Milette is a pathologist at the Centre Hospitalier Pierre-Boucher Longueuil, QC, Canada. Contact him at fran- cois.milette@cssspb.qc.ca. reference 1. Weedon D. Skin Pathology. 3rd edition. Churchill Livingstone: Elsevier, 2010. Drs. rongioletti & smoller respond to Dr. milette’s review our main goal was not to write a complete and exhaus- tive compendium. rather, it was to write just a concise atlas- text to transfer to the practicing dermatologist, pathologist, endocrinologist, and internist all of our experience and our photographic and graphic materials on some topics that are often covered scantily, receive little emphasis, or are found scattered in different sections of the general textbooks of der- matology or dermatopathology. This is a first edition where, of course, there is ample room for improvement and all criticisms are welcome and really appreciated. Milette’s criticisms are best divided into constructive and irrelevant. Constructive criticism The criticism for not including lysosomal disorders is valid. However, these diseases belong largely to the pediatric sphere that is not a strict part of our expertise. We understand that all this does not necessarily follow from the title of the vol- ume, and actually may leave some readers unsatisfied. In fact, we have discussed adding “in adults” to the title (which is already perceived as long). If a next edition is taken into consideration, it will be our first concern to add a chapter devoted to lysosomal storage diseases. We agree that some pictures are not of outstanding qual- ity. It is not always easy to get good clinical and histological photographs from uncommon diseases. Some pictures were old, difficult to reproduce, and supplied from the archives of the departments; the individuals who wrote the chapters sup- plied some others. of course, we know that is Editor’s task to ensure that the image quality is optimal. We will take heed of this suggestion for the future. Irrelevant criticisms for improvement Classification: There is no perfect classification on which all can agree. Classification, however, is a fundamental pro- cess and a necessary starting point in the study of the natural history of disease. We think that there is nothing wrong to 88 Book Review | Dermatol Pract Concept 2011;1(1):18 classify obesity as a metabolic disease, and we are not alone in this position [1]. Moreover, isn’t it true that the associa- tion of obesity with hypertension, glucose intolerance, and lipid metabolism disorder is diagnosed as metabolic syn- drome [2]? The same holds for diabetes, which is classified both as a metabolic or a nutritional disease in various text- books and articles. Necrolytic migratory erythema has been included in the chapter of “nutritional” for two reasons: it is considered pathogenetically due to a relative deficiency of zinc and essential fatty acids because the tumor reduces the amount of albumin that normally carries it around the body, and its histological features are similar to acroderma- titis enteropathica and pellagra, which are clearly nutritional disorders. Necrolytic migratory erythema has also been seen in the absence of a glucagon-producing tumor and may be associated with various systemic diseases, such as celiac dis- ease, ulcerative colitis, etc. Thus, its inclusion in the chapter of pancreatic disease or paraneoplastic disorders could also have been questioned. Concerning the repetition of just a few disease in different chapters, this is not a matter of redundancy or arbitrary and incomplete classification of rare diseases, but, on the con- trary, it reflects how metabolic, endocrinologic, nutritional, and deposition diseases may have overlapping features pre- senting with the same skin manifestation. For instance, pre- tibial myxedema can be considered both as a skin manifesta- tion of thyroid disease and also classified among the primary cutaneous mucinoses; the same is true for macular or lichen amyloidosis that can be considered both as a skin manifesta- tion of MEN 2A and also classified among the primary cuta- neous amyloidoses. We think that there is nothing obscure or confusing to discuss a disease that is always the same but occurs in different backgrounds and eventually from distinct perspectives. of course, the more the reader is familiar with this field, the higher and clearer is the perception and the understanding of the different diseases. This book, in fact, is not for absolute beginner. The criticism of the words “skin diseases” in the title and the suggestion that they should be replaced by “cutaneous manifestations” is an example of an irrelevant criticism with- out any practical consequence. “Disease” as paraphrased according to the Merriam-Webster dictionary is a condition of the living animal or of one of its parts that impairs nor- mal functioning and is typically manifested by distinguish- ing signs and symptoms. Thus, we don’t understand why the term cannot be applied in our setting. Many of the illustrated skin conditions are “disease” per se and not only skin mani- festations of systemic conditions. Incidentally, we consider cutaneous mucinoses and cutaneous calcifying disorders not as simple histological patterns but as a group of different deposition disorders that are heterogeneous. An accurate knowledge of their clinicopathologic features is essential in order not to miss some important underlying association (scleromyxedema and monoclonal gammopathy, calciphy- laxis in renal disease, etc). In conclusion, we believe constructive criticism is welcome and worth voicing and may contribute to the improvement of our book. Spurious criticism goes nowhere and sometimes may mask an underlying lack of robust arguments. Franco rongioletti Bruce r. Smoller Dr. rongioletti is Professor of Dermatology in the Section of Dermatology and Department of Pathology, University of Genova, Genova, Italy. Contact him at Franco.rongioletti@ unige.it. Dr. Smoller is Professor of Pathology and Dermatology in the Department of Pathology, University of Arkansas for Medi- cal Sciences, Little rock, Ar, USA. Contact him at Smoller- Brucer@uams.edu. references 1. Bray GA. The Metabolic Syndrome and obesity. Totowa NJ: Hu- mana Press Inc. 2007. ISBN 1588298027. 2. Eckel rH, Grundy SM, Zimmet PZ. The metabolic syndrome. Lancet 200516-22;365(9468):1415-28. review. PubMed PMID: 15836891. Final comment by mark a. Hurt, mD I thank Drs. Ko and Milette for their reviews of this book, and I thank also Drs. rongioletti and Smoller for considering and responding to Dr. Milette’s review. As Drs. rongioletti and Smoller are both editors and authors, they are not the only authors of the book. There is a total of 23 authors, including the editors, and they are positioned principally in Europe and the United States, the exception being two authors from Mexico. of the 23 chap- ters in the book, all but nine are written by authors other than the editors. In their Preface, Drs. Smoller and rongioletti lay out the reason and purpose of their book: “Dr. rongioletti has been studying, diagnosing, treating, and researching muci- noses and deposition disorders for years and this work rep- resents his dream of consolidating his amassed experiences into a concise atlas and text for the practicing dermatolo- gist, pathologist, dermatopathologist, endocrinologist, and internist.” Furthermore “Dr. Smoller has also been actively interested in cutaneous pathology as a window for systemic diseases and his written extensively on this topic.” Finally Book Review | Dermatol Pract Concept 2011;1(1):18 89 “It is the hope of the authors that each chapter will provide insights into the clinical appearance and course of the dis- eases presented, followed by a review of the pathogenesis for each disease, and a close inspection of the histopathologic changes and any accompanying special studies that might be required to establish a diagnosis.” This is a book that is of standard journal size, is relatively thin considering the subject matter, at 194 pages including the index, and the paper is of reasonably good quality. The editors divide the book into four major parts, as follows: I. Cutaneous Endocrine Disease (classified by the diseased organ) II. Cutaneous Metabolic Disease (classified by the product of the abnormal metabolism) III. Cutaneous Nutritional Disease (classified by the product of deficiency or excess without respect, necessarily, to cause) IV. Cutaneous Deposition Disease (classified by the product of deposition) The authors present the chapters within each part as if they were separate small reviews as though in a journal. Each begins with a section of “key points” similar to an abstract, except organized by bullet points, which I find to be a use- ful feature. The organization of subject matter within each chapter is by a number outline, adding additional sub-points as needed; there is no strict separation into labeled sections of “clinical presentation,” “histopathological findings,” etc., even though those descriptions are found in the paragraphs of the text. Furthermore, the authors augment the text with ample photographs of somewhat uneven quality that refer back to the text thus allowing one to find where the authors discuss the histopathological findings. The text flows easily from well-constructed sentences within concise paragraphs. Although most of the abbreviations are relatively easy to grasp from the text, a key to abbreviations in the front of each chapter might be a consideration for any future edi- tions. Although one can criticize the authors for some of the photographs in this book, I am amazed at how many very good to excellent photographs are included, especially given the rarity of some of the conditions. Minor improvements of standardization of photographic hue and contrast will serve to make the second edition better. I offer one consideration for any future edition of this book, and it is a difficult addition: a diagnostic algorithm linked to the text. Although this is a difficult task, and it per- haps is unfair to ask so much of the authors, it is enormously beneficial to have an algorithm when confronted with spe- cific, concrete histopathologic findings in the daily work of developing a differential diagnosis for the purpose of render- ing a specific diagnosis. Thus, a three-pronged approach – an algorithm, a text (with atlas), and a well-developed index – should serve well the second edition of this book. Until then, I will become a serious student of this version. Mark A. Hurt, MD Book review Editor Dr. Hurt practices dermatopathology in Maryland Heights, Mo, USA. Contact him at markhurt@aol.com.