8 research outputs found

    Age-Related Changes in Cutaneous Basal Lamin: Scanning Electron Microscopic Study

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    Scanning electron microscopy of human epidermal-dermal basal lamina demonstrated striking age-related changes. The basal lamina from abdominal skin was exposed in specimens from 26 humans by separation of epidermis and dermis after treatment with sodium bromide solutions. Transmission electron micrographs demonstrated the split to be in the lamina lucida. Scanning electron microscopy of mature epidermal-dermal junction and basal lamina showed distinct dermal valleys; tall, dome-shaped dermal papillae; and basal lamina arranged in prominent corrugations that tended to be oriented vertically on papillae and irregularly on interpapillary zones. Skin from subjects in their 7th through 10th decades demonstrated progressive loss of dermal valleys, flattening and widening of dermal papillae, and loss of basal lamina corrugations

    Peliosis of the spleen: possible association with chronic renal failure and erythropoietin therapy.

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    Splenic peliosis was identified at necropsy in a 62-year-old woman receiving continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis for end-stage renal failure, and erythropoietin therapy for uraemia and anaemia. The immediate cause of death was arrhythmia related to ischaemic heart disease, following an episode of intramuscular haematoma (secondary to platelet dysfunction). The unusual association between peliosis and renal failure, and possibly erythropoietin therapy, is discussed

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