≠ Miliaria!
ㅤ | Milia | Miliaria |
Clinical presentation | Pápulas brancas/peroladas, firmes, 1-2mm | Crystalina - vesículas translúcidas Rubra - pápulas eritematosas pruriginosas Profunda - pápulas cor de pele |
Mechanism | Retenção de queratina de origem folicular | Obstrução dos ductos écrinos - crystallina no stratum corneum - rubra no stratum spinosum - profunda na profundidade |
Etiology | Hormonal Secondary (scars, burns, porphyria, epidermolysis bullosa) | overheating, over-swaddling, fever |
Clinical presentation
- Small, pinhead sized, white, very superficial bumps on the skin that can be easily removed with a vaccinostyle or a beveled needle
- In newborns
- Tiny wite spots on the face
- Disappear spontaneously within a few weeks and are caused by temporary sebaceous retention due to hormonal factors
- In adolescents and adults
- Isolated or numerous milia are commonly observed on the cheeks, eyelids and nose
- They form due to blockage of the pilary canal of lanuginoid follicles or epidermoid metaplasia of their strucutres
- Contain compact keratin and are more common in women
- Secondary milium
- Appears on scars, burns and especially in certain bullous dermatoses (particularly porphyria and congenital epidermolysis bullosa)
- Here, the grains form due to post-lesional obstruction of a follicule, but also, if not primarily, due to retiention and then epidermoid metaplasia of the excretory sweat ducts interrupted by the scarring or bullous process (eccrine millium)
Tratamento
- Furar com agulha e drenar com pinça