Summary Although epidermoid cysts of the palms and soles have long been assumed to develop following implantation of an epidermal fragment as a result of a penetrating injury, the pathogenic mechanism is still controversial, and the discovery of a more common aetiological agent is awaited. Clinical, histological, immunohistochemical and molecular biological studies were performed on 119 epidermoid cysts of palmoplatitur location, in order to examine the rote of the eccrine ducts, and human papillomavirus (HPV), in the pathogenesis of this disorder. Characteristic histological features were found, including intracytoplasmic eosinophilic bodies (ICB: in 14 cases. 12%) in the cyst wall, vacuolar structures (V: in 28 cases, 24%), or parakeratotic nuclei (P: in 85 cases. 71%) within the keratinous mass in the cyst cavity. Ductal structures suggesting eccrine ducts (E: in 63 cases, 53%) were also found in the cyst wall or in the cyst cavity. Hither ductal structures or carcinoembryonic antigen expression (66 cases, 55%) were noted in a total of 73 cases (61%). Papillomavirus common antigens were detected in 36 cases (30%) showing one or more of the three distinct histological features, i.e. ICB, V and P, Subsequently, hybridization experiments to detect HPV DNA were performed in 47 cases, revealing an association between cysts showing ICB or V and the presence of HPV 60 DNA sequences. On the basis of our results, we propose that epidermoid cysts in the palmoplantar regions may develop from eccrine ducts, and that HPV and injury may play a role in their pathogenesis.
Although clinical, histological and viral correlations have recently been established among pigmented warts, homogeneous intracytoplasmic inclusion bodies and related types of human papillomavirus (HPV) (HPV 65, 4 and 60), the causes of the pigmentation remain unknown. In this study, comparative histological and histochemical analyses were performed with 53 pigmented (34 HPV 65-induced, 12 HPV 4-induced and seven HPV 60-induced) and 73 non-pigmented warts (27 HPV 2-induced, 23 HPV 1-induced, 12 HPV 63-induced, six unknown HPV-type induced and five HPV 60 induced) to clarify the causes of the pigmentation. Electron microscopy was also used to examine the pigmented warts. Many melanin blockade melanocytes were identified in all of the pigmented warts with Masson-Fontana staining and electron microscopy, and increased melanin in keratinocytes was also noted in 22 pigmented warts, suggesting that the dispersion of melanin granules in the dendrites of the melanin blockade melanocytes and the increased melanin granules in keratinocytes are the primary contributors to the pigmentation of the warts. The homogeneous intracytoplasmic inclusion bodies might also play a part in the darkening of the warts, as only the cases which had the inclusion bodies as well as the melanin blockade melanocytes were clinically pigmented. Although melanin blockade melanocytes were seen in a few cases of HPV 1- and HPV 2-induced warts in which the homogeneous inclusion bodies were not observed, the warts were not clinically pigmented. Melanin blockade melanocytes were not seen in any of the HPV 63-induced non-pigmented warts. In conclusion, the pigmented warts were associated with one of the related types of HPV (HPV 65, 4 and 60), and the pigmentation of the lesions is thus thought to be caused primarily by melanin blockade melanocytes. The homogeneous intracytoplasmic inclusion bodies might also play a part in the darkening of the lesions. This is the first report dealing with the pigmentary disorder associated with specific types of HPV.
The clinical and histological features of 49 lesions induced by human papillomavirus type 1 (HPV-1) were studied. The majority of cases showed the typical clinical features and location of such lesions. They were usually located on the ventral or lateral surfaces of the hands or feet, and were dome-shaped lesions with a central depression. However, HPV-1-induced lesions located on other body areas displayed different clinical features, such as those of common warts, a digitate wart, and a cutaneous horn. One lesion on a healing burn scar had a herpes-like appearance. As these 49 lesions were induced by the same type of HPV (HPV-1), differences in their clinical features are likely to have been due to host-related factors.
Fourteen cases of plantar epidermoid cyst were studied immunohistochemically and five of them were also studied electron microscopically for the presence of human papillomavirus. In eleven cases, the test results were positive for papillomavirus antigens, and in five of them, papillomaviruslike particles were observed by electron microscopy. Histological examination showed most of the cysts to contain intracytoplasmic eosinophilic bodies in cells of the cyst wall as well as the vacuolar structures in the keratinous mass within the cavity. These findings suggest an etiologic association between the papillomavirus and plantar epidermoid cysts. The "cystic papilloma" produced in rabbits by the Shope papillomavirus has been clearly demonstrated. We propose that human papillomaviruses play an important role in the genesis of plantar epidermoid cysts. This is the first report on the possible existence of a cystic papilloma in humans.
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