%0 Case Reports %T Multiple Trichoepithelioma Syndrome: A Case Report. %A Guerreiro FP %A Martins AI %A Costa E Silva J %A Teixeira N %A Ramos JN %J Cureus %V 15 %N 8 %D 2023 Aug %M 37667697 暂无%R 10.7759/cureus.42930 %X Multiple trichoepithelioma syndrome is a rare entity, and little is known about its epidemiological features. Patients usually present with multiple nonsuspicious skin lesions. Surgical excision is the mainstay of treatment, and diagnosis is usually made after the first pathology report. Once the diagnosis is established, patients are kept under clinical surveillance, and surgery is performed again if tumor burden and/or size justifies it. The authors present a male patient who presented to our outpatient clinic for the first time in 36 years without any relevant medical history, medication, or allergies. The patient had complaints of multiple skin lesions spreading across the head and neck regions. Surgical excision of the affected area and resurfacing using local advancement flaps were performed. Pathology reports were always consistent with trichoepitheliomas. No pathology of spiradenoma or cylindroma was ever reported. Usually, tumors are small enough for simple excision and primary closure. However, in the presented case, the size of the tumor and the involvement of central facial aesthetic units demanded a more complex approach.