1,721,041 research outputs found
Mastocytosis. Clinical aspects, diagnostics, therapy
Mastocytosis is a rare, almost exclusively sporadically occurring disease involving an increase in clonal tissue mast cells. The disease spectrum is heterogenous, ranging from isolated skin lesions with a normal life expectancy to rare, aggressive forms with very poor prognosis. Children are often affected. But whereas these almost invariantly display solely a cutaneous mastocytosis with polymorphous skin lesions, in adults the lesions are small and maculopapular and in over 80% of cases accompanied by involvement of bone marrow and the D816V activating mutation of the gene for the caEuroKit receptor. There are many symptoms for the disease. Patients suffer frequently from pruritus, diarrhea, abdominal cramp, palpitations and flush. Osteoporosis is often present, with osteolysis with pathological fractures frequently involved in more aggressive forms. Patients are especially at risk to severe anaphylaxis caused by hymenoptera stings. Therapy is symptomatic, with cytoreductive therapy reserved for resistant and aggressive forms
Allergic contact dermatitis due to a henna-tattoo with sensitization to p-phenylene diamine (PPD) and hydroquinone
Allergic contact dermatitis due to a henna-tattoo with sensitization to p-phenylene diamine (PPD) and hydroquinone
Actinic prurigo
The non-Native American type of actinic prurigo belongs to the group of rare idiopathic photodermatoses and therefore is often diagnosed with delay. The typical clinical and epidemiological features of actinic prurigo are described in a 10 year old girl. Detailed phototesting showed urticarial early onset and prurigo-like late onset reactions towards long-wave UVA. Repetitive photoprovocation with UVB induced delayed development of papules. HLA typing showed the typical association with HLA-DR4, in particular DRB1 0407. Treatment is usually extremely difficult and unrewarding. In this patient, the course was considerably improved by more intense physical photoprotection
Comparative effects of loratadine and desloratadine on cytokine release and adhesion molecule expression by human leukemic mast cells (HMC-1)
Update on the cutaneous neurobiology of pruritus
The pathogenesis of chronic and acute pruritus is not yet completely understood. Interactions of neurons with resident and nonresident skin cells seem to play an important role in the regulation of pruritus. Neuronal cells which express specific receptors and are capable of releasing neuromediators play an active role in this interaction. Furthermore, released neuromediators can activate immune cells including mast cells and eosinophils, which are increased in the inflammatory infiltrate of many pruritic skin diseases. Mast cells and eosinophils express receptors for neuromediators themselves. In addition, they can release neurotrophins including nerve growth factor (NGF), brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and cytokines including interleukin (IL)-31 which correlate with disease activity in patients with inflammatory skin diseases including atopic dermatitis and induce neuronal outgrowth. In part, a correlation of these mediators has also been described with pruritus. Although the interplay between transient and resident cells in the skin with peripheral nerves, mast cells, and eosinophils plays an important role in the mutual activation, the neurobiological mechanisms that lead to pruritus are not completely clear yet
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