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Conjunctival Pigmented Lesions
Nevi
- Usually appear in childhood
- Maybe pigmented or non-pigmented
- May become more pigmented with puberty or pregnancy
- Appearance
- well circumscribed
- cystic spaces
- Vascular supply
- Categorized histologically as
- Junctional
- Compound
- Subepithelial
Lesions arising from melanocytes
Complexion Associated Melanosis (CAM)
Primary Acquired Melanosis (PAM)
Malignant Melanoma
Summary Table
| Type | History | Color | Appearance | Laterality | Specific Features | Chance of Maligancy | Primary Management |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nevus | Onset in childhood | Iight brown or non-pigmented | slightly raised and cystic with well defined margins | most unilateral and solitary | pigmentation changes with puberty and pregnancy | rare | Photograph and observe every 6-12 months |
| CAM | In darkly pigmented individuals, can increase with age | Brown | flat, non-cystic, diffuse, will-defined margins, usually prominent around limbus | bilateral | can be extensive | rare | Photograph and observe every 6-12 months |
| PAM | Newly pigmented | light to dark brown | flat, diffuse and non-cirumscribed | unilateral, usually in those with lighter skin color | waxing and waning of size and pigmentation | 50% with cellular atypia | If larger than 2 clock hours: wide excision with cryotherapy, if not possible map biopsy |
| Melanoma | Denovo or arises from previous lesion above | dark brown but may be amelanotic or mixed pigmentation | elevated, thickened, nodular | unilateral | highly vascular with feeder vessel often | 35% develop metastasis by 5 years | Complete excision with cryotherapy, metastatic workup |