Rarely Koebner phenomenon has been reported as a mechanism of acute myeloid leukemia dissemination.[4]
Warts and molluscum contagiosum are often listed as causing a Koebner reaction, but this is by direct inoculation of viral particles.[3]
The linear arrangement of skin lesions in the Koebner phenomenon can be contrasted to both lines of Blaschko and dermatomal distributions. Blaschko lines follow embryotic cell migration patterns and are seen in some mosaic genetic disorders such as incontinentia pigmenti and pigment mosaicism. Dermatomal distributions are lines on the skin surface following the distribution of spinal nerve roots. The rash caused by herpes zoster (Shingles) follows such dermatomal lines. [citation needed]
History
The Koebner phenomenon was named after the rather eccentric but renowned German dermatologist Heinrich Koebner[5] (1838–1904). Koebner is best known for his work in mycology. His intense nature is illustrated by the following: in a medical meeting, he proudly exhibited on his arms and chest three different fungus infections, which he had self-inoculated, in order to prove the infectiousness of the organisms he was studying. The Koebner phenomenon is the generalized term applied to his discovery that on psoriasis patients, new lesions often appear along lines of trauma. [citation needed]
^Various grammatical forms of "Koebner phenomenon" include: "Koebnerization", and "to Koebnerize".
^ abcCox, Gary M. White; Neil H. (2000). Diseases of the skin : a color atlas and text. London [u.a.]: Mosby. ISBN0-7234-3155-8.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
^Tendas A, Niscola P, Fratoni S, Cupelli L, Morino L, Neri B, Ales M, Scaramucci L, Giovannini M, Barbati R, Dentamaro T, de Fabritiis P (Dec 2010). "Koebner's phenomenon as a rare mechanism of acute myeloid leukemia dissemination: report of two cases with a brief overview". Support Care Cancer. 18 (12): 1495–7. doi:10.1007/s00520-010-1012-9. PMID20882392. S2CID39840628.
^In the anglicisation of a German word, double vowels are often substituted for the Germanic umlaut on single vowels. The transformation of "Köbner" to "Kooebner" is just such a case. In the English literature, the umlaut is simply dropped and you often find "Köbner" simply as "Kobner".
Sources
Crissey JT, Parish LC, Holubar KH. Historical Atlas of Dermatology and Dermatologists. New York: The Parthenon Publishing Group, 2002.
Paller A, Mancini A. Hurwitz Clinical Pediatric Dermatology. Philadelphia: Elsevier Saunders, 2002.