Literature DB >> 18209173

Photodistribution of blue-gray hyperpigmentation after amiodarone treatment: molecular characterization of amiodarone in the skin.

Alfred Ammoury1, Sandra Michaud, Carle Paul, Catherine Prost-Squarcioni, Florence Alvarez, Laurence Lamant, François Launay, Jacques Bazex, Nadia Chouini-Lalanne, Marie-Claude Marguery.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: For decades, the photodistributed blue-gray skin hyperpigmentation observed after amiodarone therapy was presumably attributed to dermal lipofuscinosis. Using electron microscopy and high-performance liquid chromatography, we identified amiodarone deposits in the hyperpigmented skin sample from a patient treated with this antiarrhythmic agent. Our findings therefore indicate that the hypothesis relating the blue-gray hyperpigmentation to lipofuscin should be challenged. OBSERVATIONS: A 64-year-old man, skin phototype III, presented with asymptomatic skin hyperpigmentation that had been slowly developing on sun-exposed areas since April 2004. He had been taking amiodarone for 4 years (cumulative dose, 277 g). Electron microscopy did not show lipofuscin pigments in his skin. Conversely, abundant electron-dense membrane-bound granule deposits were observed in most of the dermal cells (fibroblasts, macrophages, pericytes, Schwann cells, and endothelial cells), especially in photoexposed skin. High-performance liquid chromatography confirmed that the skin deposits were composed of amiodarone. These results demonstrate that amiodarone hyperpigmentation is related to drug deposition on photoexposed skin.
CONCLUSION: Amiodarone-related hyperpigmentation should be considered a skin storage disease that is secondary to drug deposition.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18209173     DOI: 10.1001/archdermatol.2007.25

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arch Dermatol        ISSN: 0003-987X


  5 in total

1.  Blue man syndrome.

Authors:  Umjeet Jolly; George Klein
Journal:  CMAJ       Date:  2016-02-08       Impact factor: 8.262

2.  Intracellular sequestration of amiodarone: role of vacuolar ATPase and macroautophagic transition of the resulting vacuolar cytopathology.

Authors:  G Morissette; A Ammoury; D Rusu; M C Marguery; R Lodge; P E Poubelle; F Marceau
Journal:  Br J Pharmacol       Date:  2009-07-07       Impact factor: 8.739

Review 3.  Cutaneous adverse reactions of amiodarone.

Authors:  Krzysztof Jaworski; Irena Walecka; Lidia Rudnicka; Maciej Gnatowski; Dariusz A Kosior
Journal:  Med Sci Monit       Date:  2014-11-21

Review 4.  Drug-Induced Photosensitivity: Clinical Types of Phototoxicity and Photoallergy and Pathogenetic Mechanisms.

Authors:  Luca Di Bartolomeo; Natasha Irrera; Giuseppe Maurizio Campo; Francesco Borgia; Alfonso Motolese; Federico Vaccaro; Francesco Squadrito; Domenica Altavilla; Alessandra Grazia Condorelli; Alberico Motolese; Mario Vaccaro
Journal:  Front Allergy       Date:  2022-06-20

5.  A case report on lipofuscin deposition in a graft biopsy two years after kidney transplantation: an insignificant bystander or a pathogenic benefactor?

Authors:  Vivian W Y Leung; Sarah-Jeanne Pilon; Pierre O Fiset; Shaifali Sandal
Journal:  BMC Nephrol       Date:  2019-10-17       Impact factor: 2.388

  5 in total

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