A 60-year-old Japanese female developed widespread lichenoid eruptions with pigmentation, which initially appeared in preceding erythematous skin lesions due to dermatomyositis. Thioflavine T and Dylon stainings, electron microscopy and immunohistochemistry revealed that thick amyloid deposits were present in the papillary dermis particularly beneath the epidermis. Autopsy showed no evidence of systemic amyloidosis. Electron microscopy of the lesional skin disclosed the disturbance of lamina densa formation in the epidermal basement membrane zone (BMZ). There was disruption and dissociation of the lamina densa from the basal cell, and a lamina-densa-like substance was found in the amyloid deposits. Immunofluorescence and immunoelectron microscopy showed that type IV and VII collagens, LDA-1 antigen (a noncollagenous component of the BMZ) and laminin were distributed in irregular thick deposits along the BMZ and were also present within the amyloid itself. These findings indicate that morphological and immunohistochemical abnormalities of the lamina densa may be involved in amyloid production at the interface of the epidermis and dermis, at least in this case.
The follicular skin lesions of a patient with eosinophilic pustular folliculitis were investigated by electron microscopy. Pustules in the outer root sheath contained acantholytic keratinocytes with numerous microvilli and features of desmosomal cleavage. The infiltrating eosinophils and neutrophils exhibited autolytic or degenerative changes rather than degranulation. The aggregated tubulo-vesicular structures were associated with the debris of autolytic eosinophils. Multiple, tiny, bubble-like structures enclosed within a membrane were frequently seen in the intercellular space. The intercellular space of the outer root sheath was widened with decreased desmosomal adhesion between the keratinocytes, but no intracellular edema was detectable. The infiltrating lymphocytes, predominantly T-cells with convoluted nuclei, extended cytoplasmic processes to adjacent keratinocytes. Apposition of T-lymphocytes and Langerhans cells was noted. Some keratinocytes in the outer root sheath contained large, sebaceous lipid droplets. No obvious virus particles or other pathogenic agents were detected. It is possible that T-lymphocytes and other immunosurveillance cells are involved in the pathomechanism of eosinophilic pustular folliculitis.
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