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Histopathology of Incontinence-Associated Skin Lesions: Inner Tissue Damage Due to Invasion of Proteolytic Enzymes and Bacteria in Macerated Rat Skin

A common complication in patients with incontinence is perineal skin lesions, which are recognized as a form of dermatitis. In these patients, perineal skin is exposed to digestive enzymes and intestinal bacterial flora, as well as excessive water. The relative contributions of digestive enzymes and...

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Autores principales: Mugita, Yuko, Minematsu, Takeo, Huang, Lijuan, Nakagami, Gojiro, Kishi, Chihiro, Ichikawa, Yoshie, Nagase, Takashi, Oe, Makoto, Noguchi, Hiroshi, Mori, Taketoshi, Abe, Masatoshi, Sugama, Junko, Sanada, Hiromi
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4583398/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26407180
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0138117
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author Mugita, Yuko
Minematsu, Takeo
Huang, Lijuan
Nakagami, Gojiro
Kishi, Chihiro
Ichikawa, Yoshie
Nagase, Takashi
Oe, Makoto
Noguchi, Hiroshi
Mori, Taketoshi
Abe, Masatoshi
Sugama, Junko
Sanada, Hiromi
author_facet Mugita, Yuko
Minematsu, Takeo
Huang, Lijuan
Nakagami, Gojiro
Kishi, Chihiro
Ichikawa, Yoshie
Nagase, Takashi
Oe, Makoto
Noguchi, Hiroshi
Mori, Taketoshi
Abe, Masatoshi
Sugama, Junko
Sanada, Hiromi
author_sort Mugita, Yuko
collection PubMed
description A common complication in patients with incontinence is perineal skin lesions, which are recognized as a form of dermatitis. In these patients, perineal skin is exposed to digestive enzymes and intestinal bacterial flora, as well as excessive water. The relative contributions of digestive enzymes and intestinal bacterial flora to skin lesion formation have not been fully shown. This study was conducted to reveal the process of histopathological changes caused by proteases and bacterial inoculation in skin maceration. For skin maceration, agarose gel containing proteases was applied to the dorsal skin of male Sprague-Dawley rats for 4 h, followed by Pseudomonas aeruginosa inoculation for 30 min. Macroscopic changes, histological changes, bacterial distribution, inflammatory response, and keratinocyte proliferation and differentiation were examined. Proteases induced digestion in the prickle cell layer of the epidermis, and slight bleeding in the papillary dermis and around hair follicles in the macerated skin without macroscopic evidence of erosion. Bacterial inoculation of the skin macerated by proteolytic solution resulted in the formation of bacteria-rich clusters comprising numerous microorganisms and inflammatory cells within the papillary dermis, with remarkable tissue damage around the clusters. Tissue damage expanded by day 2. On day 3, the proliferative keratinocyte layer was elongated from the bulge region of the hair follicles. Application of proteases and P. aeruginosa induced skin lesion formation internally without macroscopic erosion of the overhydrated area, suggesting that the histopathology might be different from regular dermatitis. The healing process of this lesion is similar to transepidermal elimination.
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spelling pubmed-45833982015-10-02 Histopathology of Incontinence-Associated Skin Lesions: Inner Tissue Damage Due to Invasion of Proteolytic Enzymes and Bacteria in Macerated Rat Skin Mugita, Yuko Minematsu, Takeo Huang, Lijuan Nakagami, Gojiro Kishi, Chihiro Ichikawa, Yoshie Nagase, Takashi Oe, Makoto Noguchi, Hiroshi Mori, Taketoshi Abe, Masatoshi Sugama, Junko Sanada, Hiromi PLoS One Research Article A common complication in patients with incontinence is perineal skin lesions, which are recognized as a form of dermatitis. In these patients, perineal skin is exposed to digestive enzymes and intestinal bacterial flora, as well as excessive water. The relative contributions of digestive enzymes and intestinal bacterial flora to skin lesion formation have not been fully shown. This study was conducted to reveal the process of histopathological changes caused by proteases and bacterial inoculation in skin maceration. For skin maceration, agarose gel containing proteases was applied to the dorsal skin of male Sprague-Dawley rats for 4 h, followed by Pseudomonas aeruginosa inoculation for 30 min. Macroscopic changes, histological changes, bacterial distribution, inflammatory response, and keratinocyte proliferation and differentiation were examined. Proteases induced digestion in the prickle cell layer of the epidermis, and slight bleeding in the papillary dermis and around hair follicles in the macerated skin without macroscopic evidence of erosion. Bacterial inoculation of the skin macerated by proteolytic solution resulted in the formation of bacteria-rich clusters comprising numerous microorganisms and inflammatory cells within the papillary dermis, with remarkable tissue damage around the clusters. Tissue damage expanded by day 2. On day 3, the proliferative keratinocyte layer was elongated from the bulge region of the hair follicles. Application of proteases and P. aeruginosa induced skin lesion formation internally without macroscopic erosion of the overhydrated area, suggesting that the histopathology might be different from regular dermatitis. The healing process of this lesion is similar to transepidermal elimination. Public Library of Science 2015-09-25 /pmc/articles/PMC4583398/ /pubmed/26407180 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0138117 Text en © 2015 Mugita et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Mugita, Yuko
Minematsu, Takeo
Huang, Lijuan
Nakagami, Gojiro
Kishi, Chihiro
Ichikawa, Yoshie
Nagase, Takashi
Oe, Makoto
Noguchi, Hiroshi
Mori, Taketoshi
Abe, Masatoshi
Sugama, Junko
Sanada, Hiromi
Histopathology of Incontinence-Associated Skin Lesions: Inner Tissue Damage Due to Invasion of Proteolytic Enzymes and Bacteria in Macerated Rat Skin
title Histopathology of Incontinence-Associated Skin Lesions: Inner Tissue Damage Due to Invasion of Proteolytic Enzymes and Bacteria in Macerated Rat Skin
title_full Histopathology of Incontinence-Associated Skin Lesions: Inner Tissue Damage Due to Invasion of Proteolytic Enzymes and Bacteria in Macerated Rat Skin
title_fullStr Histopathology of Incontinence-Associated Skin Lesions: Inner Tissue Damage Due to Invasion of Proteolytic Enzymes and Bacteria in Macerated Rat Skin
title_full_unstemmed Histopathology of Incontinence-Associated Skin Lesions: Inner Tissue Damage Due to Invasion of Proteolytic Enzymes and Bacteria in Macerated Rat Skin
title_short Histopathology of Incontinence-Associated Skin Lesions: Inner Tissue Damage Due to Invasion of Proteolytic Enzymes and Bacteria in Macerated Rat Skin
title_sort histopathology of incontinence-associated skin lesions: inner tissue damage due to invasion of proteolytic enzymes and bacteria in macerated rat skin
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4583398/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26407180
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0138117
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