The age-dependent decrease of skin thickness was studied with a morphometric procedure on upper inner arm skin biopsies. Epidermal thickness decreased somewhat faster in men (7.2 % of the original value/decade) than in women (5.7 %). The total dermal thickness decreased at about the same rate in men and women (6%/decade). The thickness of the superficial layer of the dermis exhibited a biphasic evolution with age and these variations were not significantly different between men and women because of the large individual variations. This may be due partially to the difficulties of delineating with precision the limit between superficial and reticular dermis. These results are somewhat lower than those obtained by physical measurements of skin thickness. This may be due to fixation artifacts and also to the overestimation of skin thickness by physical measurements.
Biopsies were taken from the upper and inner arm of 10 60-year-old male cigarette smokers and compared with 10 age-matched controls who were non-smokers. The mean relative area, number and thickness of the elastic fibres were significantly increased in the cigarette smokers compared to the controls. These results were confirmed using antibodies to elastin or the microfibrillar component of elastic tissue. In the smokers the broader and more fragmented elastic fibres in the skin were not as intensely stained as those of the non-smokers and the ultrastructural alterations of the elastic fibres were similar to those in solar elastosis.
This novel, noninvasive RF device was effective for improving subcutaneous fat, reducing abdominal circumference and reducing subcutaneous fat layer thickness. Histologically, these improvements appear to be partly related to increased adipocyte apoptosis.
The aim of this retrospective study is to delineate in Europe the frequency and type of cutaneous manifestations associated with Takayasu arteritis (TA). Eighty patients with TA were analyzed. Symptoms suggestive of Raynaud’s syndrome were noted in 11 patients (14%) and could be directly related to large vessel involvement. Other skin lesions were observed in 10 patients (12.5%). Five had acute tender erythematous nodules on the legs with a clinical diagnosis of erythema nodosum; 2 had subacute ulcerated nodules of the legs; 1 had pyoderma-gangrenosum-like ulcerations of the four limbs which resulted from the breakdown of subcutaneous nodules; 1 had lupus-like malar flush, and the last one had urticarial lesions with livedo reticularis. Skin samples were obtained from 4 patients. Three of them agreed that reiterated biopsies be done on recurrent lesions. A granulomatous vasculitis was observed in 2 cases involving hypodermal arterioles in one case and veins in the other. The other pathological findings were septal and lobular panniculitis which can be associated with granulomatous vasculitis. Different histological findings on reiterated biopsies were frequently found. The absence of any other etiology and chronological arguments suggested a relationship between these skin lesions and TA. Tuberculosis was probable in 1 case but apparently was not related to the skin lesions.
Background: Cellular effects of UV exposure are implicated in cutaneous aging. UV radiations induce structural and cellular changes in all the compartments of skin. Aim: To study the antiaging efficacy of a cream containing 0.05% retinaldehyde with an ex vivo technique using human skin in order to approximate in vivo metabolic conditions. Methods: Human skin explants were maintained alive in organ culture for 18 days and subjected to UVA exposure, thus simulating skin photoaging. Retinaldehyde cream was then applied to the surface of the epidermis for 2 weeks and the results were compared with those of nontreated skin explants. Dermal repair was analyzed histologically with quantification of collagen and elastic fibers, and biochemically by the measure of newly synthesized collagen as shown by adding tritiated proline to the culture medium. Results: UVA exposure induced significant alterations of collagen and elastic fibers as shown by morphometric analysis. In all UVA-exposed and then retinaldehyde-treated skin specimens, collagen and elastic fibers were restored to the level of nonexposed skin. UVA exposure induced a decrease in collagen synthesis, whereas in retinaldehyde-treated UVA-exposed skin the synthesis was similar to that of unexposed skin. Conclusion: It has been shown that retinaldehyde has many of the properties of tretinoin in its biological and beneficial effects on photoaging. We have verified some of these previous observations, especially on dermal connective tissue, by obtaining significant repair of elastic fibers and collagen alteration induced by UVA exposure.
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