Elephantiasis Nostras Verrucosa: A Great Mimicker of True Elephantiasis – A Rare Case Report

Authors

Dr. Manika Alexander

Associate Professor, Department of Pathology, K H Patil institute of medical sciences (Formerly called as Gadag Institute of medical sciences), Mallasamudhra, Gadag, Karnataka, India (India)

Dr. Shwetha Patil

Assistant Professor, Department of Pathology, K H Patil institute of medical sciences (Formerly called as Gadag Institute of medical sciences), Mallasamudhra, Gadag, Karnataka, India (India)

Dr. Jeenu J Jayan

Postgraduate Residents, Department of Pathology, K H Patil institute of medical sciences (Formerly called as Gadag Institute of medical sciences), Mallasamudhra, Gadag, Karnataka, India (India)

Dr Nikitha

Professor & Head of the Department Department of Pathology, K H Patil Institute of Medical Sciences (Formerly called as Gadag Institute of Medical Sciences), Gadag, Karnataka (India)

Dr. Basavaraj P Bommanahalli

Professor & Head of the Department Department of Pathology, K H Patil Institute of Medical Sciences (Formerly called as Gadag Institute of Medical Sciences), Gadag, Karnataka (India)

Article Information

DOI: 10.51244/IJRSI.2026.1304000050

Subject Category: Elephantiasis

Volume/Issue: 13/4 | Page No: 522-527

Publication Timeline

Submitted: 2026-04-03

Accepted: 2026-04-08

Published: 2026-04-29

Abstract

Elephantiasis nostras verrucosa (ENV) is an uncommon, progressive complication of chronic non-filarial lymphedema characterized by dermal fibrosis, papillomatosis, and hyperkeratotic verrucous plaques. We report a 56-year-old woman with diabetes and chronic lower limb ulcer who developed cobblestone-like plaques over the right leg. Laboratory findings showed inflammatory markers elevation, while filarial, fungal, and tubercular aetiologies were excluded. Histopathology revealed marked hyperkeratosis, pseudoepitheliomatous hyperplasia, dilated lymphatics, dermal fibrosis, and inflammatory infiltrate. D2-40 immunostaining confirmed lymphatic endothelial proliferation. Clinicopathological correlation established the diagnosis of ENV. Early recognition is essential to differentiate ENV from filarial elephantiasis and other mimickers to ensure appropriate multidisciplinary management.

Keywords

Elephantiasis nostras verrucosa; Chronic lymphedema; Pseudoepitheliomatous hyperplasia, Dermal fibrosis, Lymphatic proliferation

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References

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