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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Skin thickening
simulating scleroderma, or progressive systemic sclerosis, has previously been reported in children and adults with insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
. We have studied eighty-nine patients with insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
and twenty-five normal control subjects. Clinical evidence of skin thickening (diabetic thick skin) was found in 22% of patients with insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
and in 4% of control subjects (p less than 0.05). Full-thickness skin biopsy specimens were taken from the forearm of nine patients with insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
and diabetic thick skin, four patients with insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
and clinically normal skin, four patients with progressive systemic sclerosis, and four normal control subjects. The sections stained with hematoxylin and eosin showed increased thickness of the dermis of the forearm skin in all diabetic patients. In diabetic thick skin the collagen bundles were large, disorganized, and separated by clear spaces. Small amounts of acid mucopolysaccharides were present in the upper reticular dermis of five patients with diabetic thick skin. Electron microscopy of the dermis showed capillary basement membrane thickening in Groups 1, 2, and 3. All patients with diabetic thick skin showed active fibroblasts and extensive collagen polymerization in the rough endoplasmic reticulum. Occasional collagen flowers were noted in all patients with diabetic thick skin. Measurements of 100 collagen fibers in the upper and lower reticular dermis of each biopsy specimen showed predominance of large fibers (greater than 60 nm) in Groups 1 and 2. Unlike scleroderma, diabetic thick skin resulted in small fiber sizes (less than 60 nm) only rarely, and bimodality of fiber sizes was not seen.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Pathologic features of diabetic thick skin. 381 98
Abstract We describe a patient with scleredema.
Thickened skin
was observed in the posterior region of her neck, shoulders, and back. A skin biopsy revealed thickened dermis consisting of numerous thickened collagen bundles. Laboratory data revealed that she was suffering from
diabetes mellitus
(DM). The skin lesions ameliorated within a period of one month when her DM condition was controlled by oral hypoglycemics. Scleredema is a rare connective tissue disorder; its cutaneous manifestation should be distinguished from scleroderma.
...
PMID:Scleredema: report of a case. 2438 34