elastin and Atrophy

elastin has been researched along with Atrophy* in 15 studies

Reviews

1 review(s) available for elastin and Atrophy

ArticleYear
[Anetoderma--a clinical and therapeutic problem].
    Polski merkuriusz lekarski : organ Polskiego Towarzystwa Lekarskiego, 2000, Volume: 9, Issue:53

    Current views on etiopathogenesis of anetoderma have been presented on the grounds of literature data. Disorders of elastin metabolism are distinctive for the disease causing elastin fibres becoming disintegrated and atrophied. Apart from mechanism of anetoderma plaques evolution clinical observation and full diagnostication of systemic collagenosis seems to be important. Despite of numerous therapeutic trials it appears that medication of anetoderma lesions is inefficacious.

    Topics: Atrophy; Dermatitis; Elastin; Humans

2000

Other Studies

14 other study(ies) available for elastin and Atrophy

ArticleYear
Histologic and Clinical Changes in Vulvovaginal Tissue After Treatment With a Transcutaneous Temperature-Controlled Radiofrequency Device.
    Dermatologic surgery : official publication for American Society for Dermatologic Surgery [et al.], 2018, Volume: 44, Issue:5

    Although transcutaneous temperature-controlled radiofrequency (TTCRF) may effectively treat vulvovaginal laxity (VVL), atrophic vaginitis (AV), orgasmic dysfunction (OD), and stress urinary incontinence (SUI), there is a lack of histopathologic evidence to validate its use.. Evaluate clinical and histological changes induced by vulvovaginal TTCRF.. This was a prospective, nonrandomized trial. Ten female subjects with mild-to-moderate VVL, with or without AV, OD, and/or SUI underwent 3 TTCRFs at 4-week intervals. Five subjects underwent pre- and post-treatment biopsies of the labia majora and vaginal canal for histology. Assessments were performed at baseline and Days 10, 30, 60, and 120.. Investigator-rated VVL improved significantly from baseline to Day 10, with improvement maintained through Day 120 (p = .001 and .001, respectively). Sexual satisfaction improved significantly by Day 60 (p = .001). Improvement in AV reached significance at Day 120 (p = .048). Although OD and SUI improved steadily, the difference in improvement did not reach statistical significance. Histology revealed that post-treatment increases in collagen, elastin, vascularity, and small nerve fibers.. Transcutaneous temperature-controlled RF resulted in significant improvements in AV, VVL, and sexual satisfaction with milder improvements in OD and SUI. Post-treatment histology demonstrated neocollagenesis, neoelastogenesis, neoangiogenesis, and the first reported finding of TTCRF-related neurogenesis.

    Topics: Adult; Atrophy; Biopsy; Elastin; Female; Humans; Middle Aged; Patient Satisfaction; Prospective Studies; Radio Waves; Radiofrequency Therapy; Sexual Dysfunction, Physiological; Surveys and Questionnaires; Temperature; Treatment Outcome; Vagina; Vulva

2018
Blepharochalasis: 'drooping eyelids that raised our eyebrows'.
    Postgraduate medical journal, 2018, Volume: 94, Issue:1117

    Topics: Anti-Bacterial Agents; Atrophy; Blepharoptosis; Doxycycline; Edema; Elastin; Female; Humans; Tacrolimus; Treatment Outcome; Young Adult

2018
Skin atrophy in cytoplasmic SOD-deficient mice and its complete recovery using a vitamin C derivative.
    Biochemical and biophysical research communications, 2009, May-01, Volume: 382, Issue:2

    Intrinsic skin ageing is characterized by atrophy and loss of elasticity. Although the skin hypertrophy induced by photoageing has been studied, the molecular mechanisms of skin atrophy during ageing remain unclear. Here, we report that copper/zinc superoxide dismutase (CuZn-SOD)-deficient mice show atrophic morphology in their skin. This atrophy is accompanied by the degeneration of collagen and elastic fibers, and skin hydroxyproline is also significantly reduced in deficient mice. These imply that the dysfunction of collagen and elastin biosynthesis are involved in the progression of skin thinning. Furthermore, transdermal administration of a vitamin C derivative which can permeate through the membrane, completely reversed the skin thinning and deterioration of collagen and elastin in the mutant mice. These indicate that the vitamin C derivative is a powerful agent for alleviating skin ageing through regeneration of collagen and elastin. The CuZn-SOD-deficient mice might be applicable to evaluation of therapeutic medicines against skin ageing.

    Topics: Animals; Ascorbic Acid; Atrophy; Collagen; Cytoplasm; Elastin; Mice; Mice, Knockout; Skin; Skin Aging; Superoxide Dismutase; Superoxide Dismutase-1

2009
Elastin gene expression in blepharochalasis.
    The Journal of dermatology, 2005, Volume: 32, Issue:1

    Blepharochalasis is a rare condition characterized by recurrent episodes of eyelid edema lead to an atrophic eyelid skin with fine wrinkles and peculiar bronze discoloration. A 32-year-old female presented with loose and redundant skin of the bilateral eyelids. We diagnosed her disease as blepharochalasis by clinical features and by disappearance of elastic fibers from the dermis in the biopsied specimen. Because elastic fibers diminish in the late phase of blepharochalasis, we performed RT-PCR to analyze the mRNA expression of elastin, a major component of elastic fiber. Elastin mRNA expression in the patient's cultured fibroblasts had not decreased compared with that in the control fibroblasts. This result suggests that environmental factors or other matrix components of elastic fibers may be involved in the loss of elastic fiber.

    Topics: Adult; Atrophy; Diagnosis, Differential; Edema; Elastin; Eyelid Diseases; Female; Fibroblasts; Gene Expression; Humans; Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction; RNA, Messenger

2005
Comparison of topical therapy for striae alba (20% glycolic acid/0.05% tretinoin versus 20% glycolic acid/10% L-ascorbic acid).
    Dermatologic surgery : official publication for American Society for Dermatologic Surgery [et al.], 1998, Volume: 24, Issue:8

    Topical treatment of striae rubra with 0.1% tretinoin and laser treatment of striae rubra and alba with the 585-nm pulsed dye laser are proven therapeutic options. However, little efficacy has been shown for treatment of striae alba topically, and the laser is currently not a suitable treatment option for darker ethnic skin types.. The purpose of this study was to demonstrate that selected commercial topical agents can improve the appearance of striae alba.. Ten patients of varying skin types (I-V) having straie distensae alba on the abdomen or thighs were selected to evaluate the effectiveness of two topical treatment regimens. Patients were placed on daily topical application of 20% glycolic acid (MD Forte) to the entire treatment area. In addition, the patients applied 10% L-ascorbic acid, 2% zinc sulfate, and 0.5% tyrosine to half to the treatment area and 0.05% tretinoin emollient cream (Renova) to the other half of the treatment area. The creams were applied on a daily basis for 12 weeks. Improvement was evaluated at 4 and 12 weeks in an objective unblinded fashion at the follow-up visits, a objective blinded fashion by visual grading at the conclusion of the study, and in an objective blinded fashion with profilometry. Additionally, histopathologic analysis was performed.. Analysis of these data reveals: 1) both regimens can improve the appearance of stretch marks; 2) these topical therapy regimens are safe and effective in study patients with minimal irritation; 3) elastin content within the reticular and papillary dermis can increase with topical 20% glycolic acid combined with 0.05% tretinoin emollient cream therapy; 4) both regimens increased epidermal thickness and decreased papillary dermal thickness in treated stretch marks when compared with untreated stretch marks; 5) combined epidermal and papillary dermal thickness in stretch marks treated with either topical regimen approaches that of normal skin; and 6) profilometry can objectively measure differences in skin texture associated with striae treatments when compared to controls, however, it is not sensitive enough to justify comparison or quantitative improvements between similarly effective treatments.

    Topics: Abdomen; Administration, Cutaneous; Adult; Ascorbic Acid; Astringents; Atrophy; Connective Tissue Diseases; Dermatologic Agents; Drug Combinations; Elastic Tissue; Elastin; Emollients; Female; Follow-Up Studies; Glycolates; Humans; Keratolytic Agents; Middle Aged; Safety; Single-Blind Method; Skin; Thigh; Tretinoin; Tyrosine; Zinc Sulfate

1998
Familial elastosis perforans serpiginosa.
    Archives of dermatology, 1993, Volume: 129, Issue:2

    Elastosis perforans serpiginosa (EPS) is an uncommon skin disease characterized by transepidermal elimination of abnormal elastic fibers. The disease is frequently associated with congenital connective tissue disorders or Down's syndrome. The pathogenesis of EPS is still unclear. There are a few reports in the literature about a familial occurrence of EPS in which different modes of inheritance are suggested. To support the hypothesis of a congenital origin of the disease, we have studied another family with EPS.. In this study, we describe a family in which two sisters and a brother were affected by EPS. The father and three paternal uncles were most probably affected by the same disease. There were no signs of other congenital connective tissue disease in the family members.. An autosomal dominant mode of inheritance with variable expression of EPS is suggested.

    Topics: Adult; Aged; Atrophy; Cicatrix; Connective Tissue Diseases; Elastic Tissue; Elastin; Female; Humans; Keratins; Keratosis; Male; Middle Aged; Neck; Skin Diseases

1993
Central nervous system involvement and generalized muscular atrophy in occipital horn syndrome: Ehlers-Danlos type IX. A first Japanese case.
    Journal of the neurological sciences, 1993, Volume: 116, Issue:1

    Occipital horn syndrome (OHS, Ehlers-Danlos syndrome type IX) belongs to the category of the copper metabolism disorders and is at present being investigated biochemically as is Menkes' disease. Unlike Menkes' disease, most patients with OHS have mild submentality. We report a case of OHS with severe central nervous system involvement and muscular atrophy in a 34-year-old male. He had psychomotor retardation and seizures since early childhood and now presented severe mental retardation and generalized muscular atrophy in addition to characteristic facial appearance, hyperelasticity of the skin and joint subluxation. Laboratory investigations revealed a low serum copper and ceruloplasmin level as well as intestinal non-absorption of copper. Radiographic imaging showed occipital exostoses, bladder diverticula, tortuosity of the peripheral vein and osteoporosis of the skeletal bones. The activity of lysyl oxidase, a copper-enzyme involved in cross-link formation in collagen, was found to be decreased in a skin-biopsy specimen. Electron-microscopic investigation of a muscle biopsy showed irregularity of the myofibrillar network and accumulation of concentric laminated bodies in the subsarcolemmal regions.

    Topics: Adult; Atrophy; Calcium; Ceruloplasmin; Copper; Dopamine beta-Hydroxylase; Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome; Elastin; Electron Transport Complex IV; Humans; Lysine; Male; Monoamine Oxidase; Muscles; Occipital Lobe; Protein-Lysine 6-Oxidase; Radiography; Skin

1993
Mast cell degranulation and elastolysis in the early stage of striae distensae.
    Journal of cutaneous pathology, 1991, Volume: 18, Issue:6

    The lesions of nine patients with early striae distensae (SD) during puberty were examined by light and electron microscopy. Specific changes were seen in very early stage SD, and in clinically uninvolved skin 0.5 to 3 cm remote from the edge of the long axis of the SD lesions. Sequential changes of elastolysis accompanied by mast cell degranulation appeared first, followed by an influx of activated macrophages that enveloped fragmented elastic fibers. The relationships among elastic fibers, mast cells, and macrophages seen in the present work suggest their critical roles in the process of SD formation, especially in the early stage. Our results also indicate that the elastic fiber is the primary target of the pathological process, and the abnormalities extend as far as 3 cm beyond the lesion into normal skin.

    Topics: Adolescent; Adult; Atrophy; Cell Degranulation; Collagen; Elastin; Female; Humans; Macrophages; Male; Mast Cells; Microscopy, Electron; Puberty; Skin; Skin Diseases

1991
Demonstration of elastin gene expression in human skin fibroblast cultures and reduced tropoelastin production by cells from a patient with atrophoderma.
    The Journal of clinical investigation, 1985, Volume: 75, Issue:2

    Atrophoderma is a rare dermal disorder characterized by a patchy distribution of areas apparently devoid of elastic fibers. Skin fibroblast cultures were established from the normal and affected dermis of a patient with this disorder. Human tropoelastin was identified in culture medium by use of electroblotting and anti-elastin antisera. An enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay was used to establish that significantly less elastin accumulated in the media of cultured cells from lesional fibroblasts over a 3-d period. Since elastin biosynthesis in most tissues is under pretranslational control, molecular hybridization to a nick-translated genomic elastin probe was performed; however, elastin messenger RNA levels were equivalent in both cell strains. Both strains produced less elastin than did normal skin fibroblasts. Extracellular proteolysis of elastin was evaluated as a possible mechanism. Elastase activity was increased and porcine tropoelastin was degraded four times faster, on a per-cell basis, in lesional fibroblast cultures than in cells derived from an unaffected site. The two cell strains exhibited no significant differences in collagen production or collagenase activity. These results are the first demonstration of elastin production by cultured human skin fibroblasts, and they suggest that the primary defect in atrophoderma may be a result of enhanced degradation of newly synthesized elastin precursors.

    Topics: Adolescent; Atrophy; Cells, Cultured; Collagen; Elastin; Female; Fibroblasts; Humans; RNA, Messenger; Skin; Skin Diseases; Tropoelastin

1985
Anetoderma: biochemical and ultrastructural demonstration of an elastin defect in the skin of three patients.
    Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology, 1984, Volume: 11, Issue:1

    Three patients with localized cutaneous lesions characteristic of anetoderma were studied. Clinically, the onset of the disease was between the ages of 17 and 25, and numerous flaccid, saclike skin lesions developed over several subsequent years. Histologically, the lesions were characterized by paucity and fragmentation of the elastic fibers. Electron microscopy demonstrated that the elastic fibers, both in papillary and deep reticular dermis in the lesional skin, were fragmented and irregular in appearance. The concentration of elastin, determined by a radioimmunoassay of desmosine, an elastin-specific cross-link compound, was markedly reduced in the lesions, as compared with unaffected skin from the same patients or with normal skin from unrelated control subjects. In contrast, the concentrations of hydroxyproline, an index of collagen, or deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), a measure of cellularity, were not changed in the lesions. Thus, the results indicate that in the three patients studied, the elastic fibers are defective and reduced in quantity. These observations suggest that the deficiency of elastin in the dermis may lead to development of the cutaneous lesions of anetoderma.

    Topics: Adult; Atrophy; Desmosine; DNA; Elastic Tissue; Elastin; Female; Humans; Hydroxyproline; Male; Microscopy, Electron; Skin

1984
Differing patterns of altered glucocorticoid secretion in experimental malignant and benign hypertension. Influences upon the lymphoid system and on arterial connective tissue metabolism.
    The Journal of pathology, 1983, Volume: 139, Issue:1

    Topics: Animals; Aorta, Thoracic; Atrophy; Collagen; Connective Tissue; Corticosterone; Elastin; Hypertension, Malignant; Hypertension, Renal; Leukocyte Count; Male; Rats; Rats, Inbred Strains; T-Lymphocytes; Thymus Gland

1983
[Aging mechanisms of the skin].
    Der Hautarzt; Zeitschrift fur Dermatologie, Venerologie, und verwandte Gebiete, 1983, Volume: 34 Suppl 6

    Topics: Aging; Atrophy; Cell Transformation, Neoplastic; DNA Repair; Elastic Tissue; Elastin; Humans; Mouth Mucosa; Proteoglycans; Skin; Skin Physiological Phenomena

1983
Elastodysplasia and elastodystrophy as the pathologic bases of ocular pterygia and pinguecula.
    Ophthalmology, 1983, Volume: 90, Issue:1

    Specimens of normal conjunctiva from three adult patients were examined by electron microscopy, which revealed normal elastogenesis in the substantia propria, but more prominently, in the episcleral tissues. Ultrastructural examination of eight pterygia and three pinguecula also disclosed evidence of elastogenesis, but in these lesions the morphogenetic sequence of fiber formation was distorted, and the elastic fibers were abnormal. The zone of hyalinization of the substantia propria immediately beneath the epithelium was the only site that manifested clear-cut evidence of collagen degeneration, which assumed the forms of effacement of the longitudinal periodicity of the collagen fibers, and of microfibrillar unfurling of the ends of the collagen fibers. Fibroblastic activity and elastic fiber formation were inconspicuous in this region. Beneath the hyalinized zone were collections of eosinophilic granular material. This material was shown ultrastructurally to be composed of excessive numbers of hollow-centered microfibrils (an elastic fiber precursor), with a tendency to clump centrally in the larger aggregated sheets and to acquire electron-dense inclusions. Numerous fibroblasts were found within this material. Finally, the elastotic fibers of light microscopy represented an abnormal maturational phase of elastic fiber production. These abnormal elastic fibers had microfibrils at their peripheries, but numerous electron-dense inclusions were associated with focal zones of amorphous elastin deposition. Occasionally histiocytes appeared to be engulfing these abnormal fibers. We have concluded that a large component of pinguecula and pterygia is the result of newly synthesized elastic fiber precursors and abnormal maturational forms of elastic fibers (elastodysplasia) that undergo secondary degeneration (elastodystrophy). These structures are presumed to be elaborated by actinically damaged fibroblasts of the substantia propria.

    Topics: Adult; Atrophy; Conjunctiva; Elastic Tissue; Elastin; Epithelium; Humans; Microscopy, Electron

1983
Corticosteroid atrophy in human skin. A study by light, scanning, and transmission electron microscopy.
    The Journal of investigative dermatology, 1983, Volume: 81, Issue:2

    Steroid atrophy was induced in 3 volunteers by the continuous, occlusive application of clobetasol propionate to the forearms for 6 weeks. The changes were followed sequentially by light, scanning, and transmission electron microscopy. a 59% decrease in viable epidermal thickness was noted after the sixth week of treatment, as well as a flattening of the dermal-epidermal junction. The 3-dimensional architecture of the dermis was strikingly reorganized. This was largely brought about by resorption of the ground substance as revealed by a progressive diminution of Hale's stain for acid mucopolysaccharides. Loss of ground substance resulted in decreased spaces between collagen and elastic fibers as shown by scanning and transmission electron microscopy. The fibrous network consequently collapsed, yielding a more compact papillary and reticular dermis. This compression caused the reorientation of both collagen and elastic fibers. However, no differences in collagen and elastin fine structure were noted. Fibroblasts were shrunken but not reduced in density. A marked decrease in number of mast cells was noted in 3-week specimens and virtually no mast cells were observed after 6 weeks. We found that the primary effect of short-term steroid use was a rearrangement of the geometry of the dermal fibrous network. This was not due to alterations in the fibers themselves but a secondary consequence of the loss of ground substance.

    Topics: Adrenal Cortex Hormones; Adult; Atrophy; Biopsy; Collagen; Elastin; Humans; Male; Microscopy, Electron, Scanning; Skin

1983