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  • 1
    ISSN: 1600-0846
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Background/aims :The fasciitis-panniculitis syndromes include several disorders characterized by skin induration due to fibrotic thickening of the septa of the subcutis and muscular fascia associated with chronic inflammation. Representative of the idiopathic form, eosinophilic fasciitis, is the prototype of the fasciitis-panniculitis syndromes. Secondary forms of the syndromes are causally related to a variety of diseases, such as infections, circulatory disorders, physical injuries and neoplasms.Methods: Histological sections of 10 idiopathic and 20 secondary cases of the fasciitis-panniculitis syndromes were assessed by means of computer-assisted image analysis. The percent of fibrous tissue, referred to as “extent of fibrosis”, and the number of lymphocytes, macrophages, eosinophils, plasma cells, and mast cells within the subcutaneous-fascial complex were assessed.Results: The “extent of fibrosis” varied from 1% to 2% in the control cases and from 4% to 98% in the index cases. The number of inflammatory cells per high power field varied from 0 to 33 in the control cases and from 9 to 323 in the index cases.Conclusions: There is a direct and positive correlation between the “extent of fibrosis” and the number of inflammatory cells. The “extent of fibrosis” and intensity of the inflammatory infiltration do not correlate with the nature of the underlying diseases, the patients’demographic data, the anatomic location of the subcutaneous induration or the duration of the lesion. It is suggested that the fasciitis-panniculitis syndromes are the morphological expression of a chronic, relapsing, inflammatory-sclerosing reaction pattern that is essentially identical in the idiopathic and the secondary forms of the disorder.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Archives of orthopaedic and trauma surgery 120 (2000), S. 502-507 
    ISSN: 1434-3916
    Keywords: Key words Articular resurfacing ; Patella ; Carbon ; filaments ; Foreign body granulomatous reaction ; Interfacial membrane ; Histomorphometry
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Analysis of retrieved woven carbon filamentous pads, used for resurfacing of the patellar joint surface, disclosed a 4-zonal organizational pattern. Zone 1, facing the articular cavity, was devoid of carbon filaments and consisted of fibrous tissue. Foreign body granulation tissue and fibrous tissue occupied about one-third and ∼50%–60% of the interfilamentous space in zones 2 and 3, respectively. Carbon filaments formed 2%–9% of zone 2 and 14%–16% of zone 3. An interfacial membrane-like zone 4 separated the carbon filamentous pads from a trabecular bony shell. The bone volume within the latter was ∼25%. Given that the purpose of articular resurfacing with implants is repopulation of the defect by chondrocytes producing a cartilaginous matrix, the woven carbon filamentous pads did not fulfill this expectation. In an environment of an ongoing foreign body-induced granulomatous reaction, the stem cells permeating the interstices of the woven carbon filamentous pad are apparently incapable of maturing into highly differentiated cells (chondrocytes) synthesizing a highly complex (cartilaginous) matrix.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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