Normal microscopic anatomy of equine body and limb skin: A morphological and immunohistochemical study

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Normal microscopic anatomy of equine body and limb skin: A morphological and immunohistochemical study. / Jørgensen, Elin Lisby Kastbjerg; Lazzarini, Giulia; Pirone, Andrea; Jacobsen, Stine; Miragliotta, Vincenzo.

I: Annals of Anatomy, Nr. 218, 2018, 2018, s. 205-2012.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Jørgensen, ELK, Lazzarini, G, Pirone, A, Jacobsen, S & Miragliotta, V 2018, 'Normal microscopic anatomy of equine body and limb skin: A morphological and immunohistochemical study', Annals of Anatomy, nr. 218, 2018, s. 205-2012. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aanat.2018.03.010

APA

Jørgensen, E. L. K., Lazzarini, G., Pirone, A., Jacobsen, S., & Miragliotta, V. (2018). Normal microscopic anatomy of equine body and limb skin: A morphological and immunohistochemical study. Annals of Anatomy, (218), 205-2012. [2018]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aanat.2018.03.010

Vancouver

Jørgensen ELK, Lazzarini G, Pirone A, Jacobsen S, Miragliotta V. Normal microscopic anatomy of equine body and limb skin: A morphological and immunohistochemical study. Annals of Anatomy. 2018;(218):205-2012. 2018. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aanat.2018.03.010

Author

Jørgensen, Elin Lisby Kastbjerg ; Lazzarini, Giulia ; Pirone, Andrea ; Jacobsen, Stine ; Miragliotta, Vincenzo. / Normal microscopic anatomy of equine body and limb skin: A morphological and immunohistochemical study. I: Annals of Anatomy. 2018 ; Nr. 218. s. 205-2012.

Bibtex

@article{fa2ad9fb8750409e902e3c633c9b5d4f,
title = "Normal microscopic anatomy of equine body and limb skin: A morphological and immunohistochemical study",
abstract = "Introduction Information on microscopic anatomy of equine skin is sparse. In horses, limb wounds often become chronic and/or non-healing whereas body wounds heal normally. These dissimilarities in healing patterns might be a product of different phenotypic characteristics of body and limb skin. The objective of this study was to investigate microscopic anatomy, epidermal thickness, keratinocyte proliferation and differentiation as well as the presence of mast cells in normal equine skin of body and limb. Materials and methods The study involved body and limb skin biopsies from six horses. Histological characteristics of the epidermis were assessed and epithelial thickness measured. Immunohistochemistry was performed to investigate epidermal differentiation patterns of cytokeratin (CK) 10, CK14, CK16, loricrin, and peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha (PPAR-α), epidermal proliferation (Ki-67 immunostaining), and mast cells distribution in the skin. Results The epidermis was significantly thicker in the limb skin compared to body skin (p < 0.01). Epidermal proliferation and CK distribution did not show differences in the two anatomical areas. Loricrin presence was focally found in the spinous layer in four out of six limb skin samples but not in body skin samples. Tryptase positive mast cells were detected in the dermis and their density (cell/mm2) was not different between body and limb. Discussion and conclusion Here we report for the first time about the normal distribution of CK10, CK14, CK16, PPAR-α, and loricrin in equine limb and body skin as well as about epidermal proliferation rate and mast cell count. It will be relevant to investigate the distribution of the investigated epithelial differentiation markers and the role of mast cells during equine wound healing and/or other skin diseases.",
author = "J{\o}rgensen, {Elin Lisby Kastbjerg} and Giulia Lazzarini and Andrea Pirone and Stine Jacobsen and Vincenzo Miragliotta",
year = "2018",
doi = "10.1016/j.aanat.2018.03.010",
language = "English",
pages = "205--2012",
journal = "Annals of Anatomy",
issn = "0940-9602",
publisher = "Elsevier GmbH",
number = "218",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Normal microscopic anatomy of equine body and limb skin: A morphological and immunohistochemical study

AU - Jørgensen, Elin Lisby Kastbjerg

AU - Lazzarini, Giulia

AU - Pirone, Andrea

AU - Jacobsen, Stine

AU - Miragliotta, Vincenzo

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - Introduction Information on microscopic anatomy of equine skin is sparse. In horses, limb wounds often become chronic and/or non-healing whereas body wounds heal normally. These dissimilarities in healing patterns might be a product of different phenotypic characteristics of body and limb skin. The objective of this study was to investigate microscopic anatomy, epidermal thickness, keratinocyte proliferation and differentiation as well as the presence of mast cells in normal equine skin of body and limb. Materials and methods The study involved body and limb skin biopsies from six horses. Histological characteristics of the epidermis were assessed and epithelial thickness measured. Immunohistochemistry was performed to investigate epidermal differentiation patterns of cytokeratin (CK) 10, CK14, CK16, loricrin, and peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha (PPAR-α), epidermal proliferation (Ki-67 immunostaining), and mast cells distribution in the skin. Results The epidermis was significantly thicker in the limb skin compared to body skin (p < 0.01). Epidermal proliferation and CK distribution did not show differences in the two anatomical areas. Loricrin presence was focally found in the spinous layer in four out of six limb skin samples but not in body skin samples. Tryptase positive mast cells were detected in the dermis and their density (cell/mm2) was not different between body and limb. Discussion and conclusion Here we report for the first time about the normal distribution of CK10, CK14, CK16, PPAR-α, and loricrin in equine limb and body skin as well as about epidermal proliferation rate and mast cell count. It will be relevant to investigate the distribution of the investigated epithelial differentiation markers and the role of mast cells during equine wound healing and/or other skin diseases.

AB - Introduction Information on microscopic anatomy of equine skin is sparse. In horses, limb wounds often become chronic and/or non-healing whereas body wounds heal normally. These dissimilarities in healing patterns might be a product of different phenotypic characteristics of body and limb skin. The objective of this study was to investigate microscopic anatomy, epidermal thickness, keratinocyte proliferation and differentiation as well as the presence of mast cells in normal equine skin of body and limb. Materials and methods The study involved body and limb skin biopsies from six horses. Histological characteristics of the epidermis were assessed and epithelial thickness measured. Immunohistochemistry was performed to investigate epidermal differentiation patterns of cytokeratin (CK) 10, CK14, CK16, loricrin, and peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha (PPAR-α), epidermal proliferation (Ki-67 immunostaining), and mast cells distribution in the skin. Results The epidermis was significantly thicker in the limb skin compared to body skin (p < 0.01). Epidermal proliferation and CK distribution did not show differences in the two anatomical areas. Loricrin presence was focally found in the spinous layer in four out of six limb skin samples but not in body skin samples. Tryptase positive mast cells were detected in the dermis and their density (cell/mm2) was not different between body and limb. Discussion and conclusion Here we report for the first time about the normal distribution of CK10, CK14, CK16, PPAR-α, and loricrin in equine limb and body skin as well as about epidermal proliferation rate and mast cell count. It will be relevant to investigate the distribution of the investigated epithelial differentiation markers and the role of mast cells during equine wound healing and/or other skin diseases.

U2 - 10.1016/j.aanat.2018.03.010

DO - 10.1016/j.aanat.2018.03.010

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 29730469

SP - 205

EP - 2012

JO - Annals of Anatomy

JF - Annals of Anatomy

SN - 0940-9602

IS - 218

M1 - 2018

ER -

ID: 196712878