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1.
Br J Dermatol ; 184(3): 524-531, 2021 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32574377

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Early-stage mycosis fungoides (MF) includes involvement of dermatopathic lymph nodes (LNs) or early lymphomatous LNs. There is a lack of unanimity among current guidelines regarding the indications for initial staging imaging in early-stage presentation of MF in the absence of enlarged palpable LNs. OBJECTIVES: To investigate how often imaging is performed in patients with early-stage presentation of MF, to assess the yield of LN imaging, and to determine what disease characteristics promoted imaging. METHODS: A review of clinicopathologically confirmed newly diagnosed patients with cutaneous patch/plaque (T1/T2) MF from PROspective Cutaneous Lymphoma International Prognostic Index (PROCLIPI) data. RESULTS: PROCLIPI enrolled 375 patients with stage T1/T2 MF: 304 with classical MF and 71 with folliculotropic MF. Imaging was performed in 169 patients (45%): 83 with computed tomography, 18 with positron emission tomography-computed tomography and 68 with ultrasound. Only nine of these (5%) had palpable enlarged (≥ 15 mm) LNs, with an over-representation of plaques, irrespectively of the 10% body surface area cutoff that distinguishes T1 from T2. Folliculotropic MF was not more frequently imaged than classical MF. Radiologically enlarged LNs (≥ 15 mm) were detected in 30 patients (18%); only seven had clinical lymphadenopathy. On multivariate analysis, plaque presentation was the sole parameter significantly associated with radiologically enlarged LNs. Imaging of only clinically enlarged LNs upstaged 4% of patients (seven of 169) to at least IIA, whereas nonselective imaging upstaged another 14% (24 of 169). LN biopsy, performed in eight of 30 patients, identified N3 (extensive lymphomatous involvement) in two and N1 (dermatopathic changes) in six. CONCLUSIONS: Physical examination was a poor determinant of LN enlargement or involvement. Presence of plaques was associated with a significant increase in identification of enlarged or involved LNs in patients with early-stage presentation of MF, which may be important when deciding who to image. Imaging increases the detection rate of stage IIA MF, and identifies rare cases of extensive lymphomatous nodes, upstaging them to advanced-stage IVA2.


Subject(s)
Mycosis Fungoides , Skin Neoplasms , Humans , Lymph Nodes/diagnostic imaging , Lymph Nodes/pathology , Mycosis Fungoides/diagnostic imaging , Mycosis Fungoides/pathology , Neoplasm Staging , Prognosis , Prospective Studies , Skin Neoplasms/diagnostic imaging , Skin Neoplasms/pathology
2.
Genomics ; 29(1): 282-4, 1995 Sep 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8530087

ABSTRACT

Mutations in the three genes (LAMA3, LAMB3, and LAMC2) that encode the three chains (alpha 3, beta 3, and gamma 2, respectively) of laminin 5, a protein involved in epidermal-dermal adhesion, have been established as the genetic basis for the inherited blistering skin disorder, Herlitz junctional epidermolysis bullosa (H-JEB). In this study, we performed mutational analysis on genomic DNA from a child with H-JEB and identified a nonsense mutation in the alpha 3 chain gene (LAMA3) consisting of a homozygous C-to-T transition resulting in a premature termination codon (CGA-->TGA) on both alleles. The parents were shown to be heterozygous carriers of the same mutation. Direct mutation analysis was used to perform DNA-based prenatal diagnosis from a chorionic villus biopsy at 10 weeks' gestation in a subsequent pregnancy. The fetus was predicted to be genotypically normal with respect to the LAMA3 mutation.


Subject(s)
Cell Adhesion Molecules/genetics , Epidermolysis Bullosa, Junctional/genetics , Point Mutation , Base Sequence , Child , Chorionic Villi Sampling , DNA Mutational Analysis , DNA Primers , Female , Homozygote , Humans , Macromolecular Substances , Male , Molecular Sequence Data , Pedigree , Polymerase Chain Reaction , Pregnancy , Prenatal Diagnosis , Kalinin
3.
J Hypertens ; 13(2): 265-8, 1995 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7615958

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To determine whether there is a reduction in human forearm skin capillary density in essential hypertension. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: We compared the number of capillary loops in the forearm skin of 12 patients with established, uncomplicated essential hypertension (mean blood pressure 180/109 mmHg) with that in carefully matched control subjects, using intravital capillaroscopy and fluorescein angiography. RESULTS: There was a significant reduction in forearm skin capillary density in the hypertensive patients compared with the normotensive subjects. This represents a reduction by approximately 20% in capillary density. Capillary density was inversely correlated with blood pressure in the hypertensive patients alone (r = -0.4, P < 0.05) and in the whole group. CONCLUSION: The present study demonstrates a reduction in capillary density in the forearm of patients with essential hypertension. If this rarefaction in the forearm is also present in other vascular beds, it could result in an approximately 20% increase in peripheral resistance, which might play an important additional role in determining blood pressure.


Subject(s)
Forearm/blood supply , Hypertension/physiopathology , Adult , Aged , Blood Pressure , Capillaries/pathology , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged
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