Dystrophy Reticular Pigmentary

Reticular pigment dystrosia is a rare hereditary disease. It is a violation of the production of melanin pigment in the skin. With this pathology, the process of synthesis of one of the main components of melanin is disrupted and, as a result, a color similar to freckles appears. Dystrosia is characterized by the fact that the disease develops over many years



**Pigmentary tissue dystrophy, a common form of the Leiden type, non-parasitic pigmentary dystrophy** - these names unite a group of rare diseases associated with the appearance of an excess of brownish-yellow pigment in the skin and/or tissues of the iris of one eye and the absence of this pigment in the second eye. Dystrophic changes are often called slowly progressive proliferative tissue diseases that affect one or more organs and lead to changes in the morphology and functions of the affected tissues.