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Past Issue:
Volume 19, Number 3 • July 2006
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Cronkhite-Canada syndrome presenting as eosinophilic gastroenteritis

Robert D. Anderson, MD, Rikin Patel, MD, J. Kent Hamilton, MD, and C. Richard Boland, MD

Cronkite-Canada Syndrome (CCS), first described in 1955, is a rare clinical syndrome of unknown etiology. CCS is diagnosed clinically, and the presenting symptoms include alopecia, cutaneous hyperpigmentation, gastrointestinal polyposis, and onychodystrophy, often accompanied by diarrhea, weight loss, and abdominal pain. We describe a unique case of CCS that presented with eosinophilic infilatrate on gastric and duodenal biopsies and review the literature pertaining to this rare syndrome.