Literature DB >> 25160098

The immunocompromised district in dermatology: A unifying pathogenic view of the regional immune dysregulation.

Vincenzo Ruocco1, Eleonora Ruocco2, Vincenzo Piccolo2, Giampiero Brunetti2, Luigi Pio Guerrera2, Ronni Wolf3.   

Abstract

Besides the systemic immune deficiency, a sectorial default in immune control may occur in immunocompetent subjects. This regional immune defect can appear and remain confined to differently damaged skin areas, lately labeled immunocompromised districts (ICDs). An ICD is a skin area more vulnerable than the rest of the body for genetic or acquired reasons. Its vulnerability mainly consists in a local dysregulation of the immune control, which often facilitates (but sometimes hinders) the local onset of immunity-related eruptions or skin disorders. The factors responsible for localized immune dysregulation are multifarious, being represented by chronic lymphatic stasis, herpetic infections, ionizing or ultraviolet (UV) radiations, burns, all sorts of trauma (especially amputation), tattooing, intradermal vaccinations, and others of disparate nature (eg, paralytic stroke, poliomyelitis). Whatever the cause, in time an ICD may become a vulnerable site, prone to developing opportunistic infections, tumors, or dysimmune reactions (often of granulomatous type), strictly confined to the district itself; however, the opposite may also occur with systemic immune disorders or malignancies that selectively spare the district. In any case, the immunologic behavior of an ICD is different from that of the rest of the body. The pathomechanisms involved in this sectorial immune destabilization may reside in locally hampered lymph drainage that hinders the normal trafficking of immunocompetent cells (eg, chronic lymphedema, posttraumatic lymph stasis) or in a damage to sensory nerve fibers that release immunity-related peptides (eg, herpetic infections, carpal tunnel syndrome), or in both conditions (eg, amputation stump, radiation dermatitis). The ICD is a conceptual entity with no definite shape or dimension. It may take an extremely variable form and extent depending on the causative agent, ranging from a minimal area (eg, intradermal vaccination) or a small area (eg, herpes simplex infection), through a wide area (eg, radiotherapy), a bandlike segment (eg, skin mosaicism, herpes zoster infection), or an acral area (eg, carpal tunnel syndrome), up to a whole limb (eg, Stewart-Treves syndrome) or even an entire half body (eg, brain stroke). Varied newly coined terminology can be used to indicate the specific cause each time that it is responsible for a regional immune dysregulation. The advantage of the umbrella term ICD is that it encompasses all the possible causes involved in a local immune destabilization. An ICD may have a congenital or a postnatal origin, and interesting similarities between the two forms exist. An ICD may also take place in patients with a preexisting systemic immune deficiency, thus creating a more vulnerable site in an already vulnerable patient. Identifying a cutaneous ICD in a given patient is an important standpoint for both diagnostic and prevention purposes. This can be proven by the educative clinical examples that are reported here.
Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 25160098     DOI: 10.1016/j.clindermatol.2014.04.004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Dermatol        ISSN: 0738-081X            Impact factor:   3.541


  32 in total

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Review 3.  Atypical Cutaneous Presentations of Sarcoidosis: Two Case Reports and Review of the Literature.

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Authors:  Christopher H Hsu; Ghasem Rahmatpour Rokni; Nessa Aghazadeh; Nooshin Brinster; Yu Li; Atis Muehlenbachs; Cynthia S Goldsmith; Hui Zhao; Brett Petersen; Andrea M McCollum; Mary G Reynolds
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5.  The distribution of cutaneous metastases correlates with local immunologic milieu.

Authors:  Joshua M Schulman; Mariela L Pauli; Isaac M Neuhaus; Roberto Sanchez Rodriguez; Keyon Taravati; Uk Sok Shin; Timothy H McCalmont; Michael D Rosenblum
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Review 6.  Lymphatic Vessels, Inflammation, and Immunity in Skin Cancer.

Authors:  Amanda W Lund; Terry R Medler; Sancy A Leachman; Lisa M Coussens
Journal:  Cancer Discov       Date:  2015-11-09       Impact factor: 39.397

7.  Basal Cell Carcinoma Originating in a Tattoo: Case Report and Review of an Uncommon Complication in Tattoo Recipients.

Authors:  Boya Abudu; Christof P Erickson; Antoanella Calame; Philip R Cohen
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Review 8.  A Review of Acquired Autoimmune Blistering Diseases in Inherited Epidermolysis Bullosa: Implications for the Future of Gene Therapy.

Authors:  Payal M Patel; Virginia A Jones; Christy T Behnam; Giovanni Di Zenzo; Kyle T Amber
Journal:  Antibodies (Basel)       Date:  2021-05-17

Review 9.  Zosteriform impetigo: Wolf's isotopic response in a cutaneous immunocompromised district.

Authors:  Philip R Cohen
Journal:  Dermatol Pract Concept       Date:  2015-07-31

10.  Selective localization or sparing of skin disorders in neurologically injured areas: an underestimated connubium.

Authors:  Vincenzo Piccolo; Teresa Russo; Eleonora Ruocco; Adone Baroni
Journal:  Indian J Dermatol       Date:  2014-11       Impact factor: 1.494

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