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The manifestations of Langerhans cell histiocytosis (LCH) are legion in both local and systemic variants. About 15–61% patients with LCH have otologic involvement; this manifestation is more frequent in children with multisystem disease and a primary manifestation in 5–25% of patients. Among otologic lesions, solitary external ear LCH, as the only site of clinically non-progressive disease, is very rare.1 2
This case illustrates an instance of external ear canal LCH, initially managed without success as an eczematous lesion/seborrhoeic dermatitis for 8 months in a 3-year-old child; refractoriness of the lesion forced a biopsy, which on histopathology was diagnosed as LCH (figures 1 and 2).
The patient was found to have no bone lesion and no other focus on systemic survey.
In children, this situation underpins the ineffable import of histological evaluation in all refractory/recalcitrant cases of ‘eczematoid’ lesions and a necessary honing of the suspicion index towards the possibility of LCH in such lesions.3
Footnotes
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Competing interests None.
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Patient consent Obtained.