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Melasma is an acquired hyperpigmentary disorder that commonly affects women from Asia and Latin-America.There is evidence of subclinical inflammation supported by diffuse spectrometry and by prominent inflammatory cells in affected areas; however this infiltrate and its inflammatory mediators remains unexplored. Chronic inflammation induces melanogenesis and angiogenesis; thus, it could be linked to its recurrent nature.Therefore, the aim of this study is to describe the inflammatory cellular infiltrate, and the expression of main inflammatory and angiogenic mediators in this condition, as well as to explore its relationship with severity of disease.
Using histological, histochemistry, immunohistochemistry, and quantitative real-time PCR, we evaluated melasma lesions from 20 healthy female patients with malar melasma without specific solar exposure or photoprotection measures within the previous 3 weeks and compared them to non lesional skin.
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Melasma is a frequent, photoinduced, pigmentary disorder among latin-american women. Its etiology is not completely elucidated; however, there is evidence of a melanogenic paracrine cytokine network between the melanocyte and other skin cells, including keratinocytes, fibroblasts, vascular and inflammatory cells, which regulate melanocyte function.
Previous reports in lesional skin have described increased mast cell infiltration in elastotic areas, presence of a moderate lymphohistiocytic infiltrate, increased vascularity, and up-regulation of proangiogenic factors. This histological evidence of skin inflammation is also supported clinically by colorimetry and thermography, and by the improvement of pigmentation with topical anti-inflammatories.
Photoinduced dermal inflammation might be related to epidermal hyperpigmentation through the production of melanogenic cytokines, and growth factors, and through the secretion of COX-2 induced prostaglandins by keratinocytes, a mechanism involved in the pathogenesis of postinflammatory hyperpigmentation which has not been evaluated in melasma.
The aim of this study is to describe the ongoing characteristics of inflammation in this condition by measuring the cellular infiltrate, the expression of acute and chronic immune inflammatory mediators, and non-immune inflammation mechanism such as COX-2, as well as to explore its relationship with severity of disease, elastosis, and melanin staining.
Twenty healthy female patients with malar melasma without specific solar exposure or photoprotection measures within the previous 3 weeks were enrolled. Disease severity was estimated using the Melasma Area and Severity Index (MASI). Histological, histochemical, immunohistochemistry, and quantitative real-time PCR were used to evaluate the presence of these markers in melasma lesions and compare them to nonlesional skin.
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20 participants in 1 patient group
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