- Marie Antoinette syndrome
-
Marie Antoinette Syndrome is a sudden whitening of the hair. The event that named the syndrome was the observation that the hair of unhappy and ill-fated Queen Marie Antoinette of France turned stark white the night before her execution in the French Revolution.
Documented cases
The first actual documented case in history is represented in the Talmud by a story of a Jewish scholar who, at the age of 17 years, developed white hair locks due to overwork.
Now and again, contemporary cases have been documented, as in bomb victims in the second world war or in a recently published case [1].
Causes
The syndrome is thought to be a variant of alopecia areata diffusa or autoimmune non-scarring hair loss that affects selectively all pigmented hairs, leaving only the white hair behind.
Triggers activating the autoimmune mechanisms have been postulated, including sorrow and fear, but also fits of rage, unwelcome and unexpected news and overindulgence in sexual activities [2].
References
- ^ Navarini AA, Nobbe S, Trüeb RM. Archives of Dermatology, 2009:Jun 145(6):656. Marie-Antoinette Syndrome
- ^ Landois. 1866: Bubbles in the hair shaft
Dermatitis and eczema (L20–L30, 690–693,698) Atopic dermatitis Besnier's prurigoSeborrheic dermatitis Contact dermatitis
(allergic, irritant)other: Abietic acid dermatitis · Diaper rash · Airbag dermatitis · Baboon syndrome · Contact stomatitis · Protein contact dermatitisEczema Autoimmune estrogen dermatitis · Autoimmune progesterone dermatitisBreast eczema · Ear eczema · Eyelid dermatitis · Hand eczema (Chronic vesiculobullous hand eczema, Hyperkeratotic hand dermatitis)Autosensitization dermatitis/Id reaction (Candidid, Dermatophytid, Molluscum dermatitis) · Circumostomy eczema · Dyshidrosis · Juvenile plantar dermatosis · Nummular eczema · Nutritional deficiency eczema · Sulzberger–Garbe syndrome · Xerotic eczemaPruritus/Itch/
PrurigoDrug-induced pruritus (Hydroxyethyl starch-induced pruritus) · Senile pruritus · Aquagenic pruritus (Aquadynia)Adult blaschkitis · due to liver disease (Biliary pruritus · Cholestatic pruritus) · Prion pruritus · Prurigo pigmentosa · Prurigo simplex · Puncta pruritica · Uremic pruritusOther/ungrouped Categories:- Autoimmune diseases
- Conditions of the skin appendages
- Marie Antoinette
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.