Lake lines - meaning and definition. What is Lake lines
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What (who) is Lake lines - definition

LINES ON SKIN, BELIEVED TO TRACE THE MIGRATION OF EMBRYONIC CELLS, INVISIBLE UNDER NORMAL CONDITIONS.
Lines of Blaschko; Blaschko; Blaschko's Lines; Blashko’s lines; Blashko's lines; Blaschko lines; Blaschkos lines; Blaschko's Syndrome

Kathleen Lines         
BRITISH WRITER
Katherine Lines
Kathleen Mary Lines (24 September 1902 – 24 December 1988) was a book critic, editor, anthologist and librarian from Canada.Kathleen Lines Oxford Encyclopedia of Children's Literature An expert on children's literature, she wrote, compiled, and edited Four to Fourteen (1950) for the National Book League.
Blaschko's lines         
Blaschko's lines, also called the lines of Blaschko, are lines of normal cell development in the skin. These lines are invisible under normal conditions, but can become apparent as whorls, patches, streaks or lines in a linear or segmental distribution over the skin due to a mosaic skin condition.
Langer's lines         
TOPOLOGICAL LINES DRAWN ON HUMAN BODY CORRESPOND TO THE NATURAL ORIENTATION OF COLLAGEN FIBERS IN DERMIS.
Tension lines; Langers lines; Langer lines; Lines of Langerhans; Cleavage lines
Langer's lines, Langer lines of skin tension, or sometimes called cleavage lines, are topological lines drawn on a map of the human body. They are parallel to the natural orientation of collagen fibers in the dermis, as well as the underlying muscle fibers.

Wikipedia

Blaschko's lines

Blaschko's lines, also called the lines of Blaschko, are lines of normal cell development in the skin. These lines are only visible in those with a mosaic skin condition or in chimeras where different cell lines contain different genes. These lines may express different amounts of melanin, or become visible due to a differing susceptibility to disease. In such individuals, they can become apparent as whorls, patches, streaks or lines in a linear or segmental distribution over the skin. They follow a V shape over the back, S-shaped whirls over the chest and sides, and wavy shapes on the head. Not all mosaic skin conditions follow Blaschko's lines.

The lines are believed to trace the migration of embryonic cells. They do not correspond to nervous, muscular, or lymphatic systems. The lines are not unique to humans and can be observed in other non-human animals with mosaicism.

Alfred Blaschko is credited with the first demonstration of these lines in 1901.