Within ten days to three months, the lesions heal on their own, leaving behind a pathognomonic reticulate scar.
[2] Clinical characteristics linked to congenital erosive and vesicular dermatosis include cicatricial baldness (39%), nail dysplasia or hypoplasia (39%), hyperthermia with/or hypohidrosis in scarred areas (39%), ophthalmological abnormalities (36%), and neurodevelopmental abnormalities (30%).
Intrauterine infections, amniotic adhesions, and a developmental abnormality with atypical repair in preterm skin are among the etiologic possibilities.
[4] The congenital erosive and vesicular dermatosis histopathologic results vary according to the disease's stage.
[3] Biopsy specimens from late lesions might either look normal in the dermis or exhibit scar development with a decrease in hair follicles and absent eccrine glands, according to histopathologic evaluation.