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  • 1
    ISSN: 1600-0560
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Two cases of acquired reactive perforating collagenosis with poorly controlled diabetes mellitus were studied by histochemistry and by electron microscopy. In excoriated wounds, the necrotic mass on the bottom of the ulcer contained the collagen bundles which were continuous with the collagen bundles in the reticular layer. In the developing stage, the epidermis regenerated between the necrotic mass and the reticular dermis, and the collagen bundles in the reticular dermis were in continuity with those in the necrotic mass through the epithelial tunnels. The collagen in the epidermal channels did not degenerate ultra-structurally. In the mature lesion, collagen bundles being eliminated through the epidermis were surrounded by the fibroblasts at the basal cell layer. Collagen fibers were seen in the cytoplasm of these fibroblasts. From these findings, the mechanisms of the formation of the eruption in acquired reactive perforating collagenosis might be as follows: 1) In the developing stage, the regeneration of epidermis progresses between the necrotic mass and the reticular dermis, and among the collagen bundles. As a result, the collagen bundles remain in the channels of the epidermis. And then, 2) the regenerated epidermis makes the thick horny layer. As a result, the necrotic masses are lifted up and the collagen bundles are pulled up from the dermis through the epidermal channels.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1860-1499
    Keywords: Squamous cell carcinoma ; Nude mice ; Transplantation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Extirpated specimens of a squamous cell carcinoma from a human thigh were transplanted to the subcutaneous tissue of nude mice. Fourteen days later, the transplanted tumor masses were, again, extirpated from the nude mice. The transplanted chimera of the squamous cell carcinoma as seen with the electron microscope resembled the tumor cells before transplantation. It is concluded that ultrastructural investigation of transplanted chimera from squamous cell carcinoma cases may be useful for examining the site of action and clinical effects of anticancer drugs on this kind of tumor.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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