نتایج جستجو برای: Acantholysis

تعداد نتایج: 224  

Journal: :The American journal of pathology 2005
Juan Arredondo Alexander I Chernyavsky Ali Karaouni Sergei A Grando

Pemphigus vulgaris (PV) is a potentially lethal mucocutaneous blistering disease characterized by cell-cell detachment within the stratified epithelium (acantholysis) caused by IgG autoantibodies. Intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIg) therapy effectively treats PV, but the mechanism is not fully understood. To further understand acantholysis and the efficacy of IVIg, we measured effects of IgG frac...

Journal: :Indian Journal of Dermatology, Venereology, and Leprology 2013

Journal: :Indian journal of dermatology, venereology and leprology 2005
Sandeep Arora Gulhima Arora P Ranjan

Linear acantholytic dermatoses are a spectrum of cutaneous disorders that form a subset of linear dermatoses with distinct clinical features and histopathologically show acantholysis. The lesions may be zosteriform or follow the lines of Blaschko. This report describes a four-year-old boy who, on a follow up of two years, exhibited a relapsing acantholytic dermatosis along the lines of Blaschko...

AH Ehsani R Mahmoud Robati S Toosi Z Safaei Naraghi

Patients with keratotic lesions distributed in a unilateral, linear, zosteriform or localized pattern and revealing histopathologic features of dyskeratotic acantholysis have been reported previously. There is some controversy in the appropriate nosologic classification of this entity. Some authors consider it as a localized form of Darier’s disease while others place it as a variant of e...

Journal: :Biological chemistry 2003
Theda Schuh Robert Besch Evelyn Braungart Michael J Flaig Kathrin Douwes Christian A Sander Viktor Magdolen Christopher Probst Katja Wosikowski Klaus Degitz

Pemphigus is an autoimmune blistering disease of the skin and mucous membranes. It is caused by autoantibodies directed against desmosomes, which are the principal adhesion structures between epidermal keratinocytes. Binding of autoantibodies leads to the destruction of desmosomes resulting in the loss of cell-cell adhesion (acantholysis) and epidermal blisters. The plasminogen activator system...

Journal: :Journal of Investigative Dermatology 1962

Journal: :Veterinary Pathology 1973

2013
Massimiliano Scalvenzi Franco Palmisano Maria Carmela Annunziata Ernesto Mezza Immacolata Cozzolino Claudia Costa

Subcorneal pustular dermatosis (SCPD, also known as Sneddon-Wilkinson disease) is a rare, benign, chronic, sterile pustular eruption which usually develops in middle-age or elderly women; it is rarely seen in childhood and adolescence. The primary lesions are pea-sized pustules classically described as half-pustular, half-clear flaccid blisters. Histologically the most important feature is a su...

2010
Meryem Bektas Puneet Jolly David S. Rubenstein

Pemphigus is a group of human autoimmune blistering diseases of the skin in which autoantibodies to desmosome cadherins induce loss of cell-cell adhesion (acantholysis). In addition to steric hindrance and activation of intracellular signaling, apoptosis has been suggested to contribute to the mechanism by which pathogenic IgG induces acantholysis. We review the current literature examining the...

Journal: :Archives of dermatology 2004
Vu Thuong Nguyen Juan Arredondo Alexander I Chernyavsky Mark R Pittelkow Yasuo Kitajima Sergei A Grando

BACKGROUND Pemphigus vulgaris (PV) is an autoimmune, IgG autoantibody-mediated disease of skin and mucosa leading to progressive blistering and nonhealing erosions. Patients develop autoantibodies to adhesion molecules mediating intercellular adhesion and to keratinocyte cholinergic receptors regulating cell adhesion. OBSERVATIONS To determine whether a cholinergic agonist can abolish PV IgG-...

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