Anti-p200 pemphigoid is an autoimmune subepidermal blistering disease characterized by autoantibodies to an unknown 200-kDa acidic noncollagenous glycoprotein of the lower lamina lucida, whereas antilaminin 5 mucous membrane pemphigoid is characterized by autoantibodies to a major basement membrane extracellular matrix, laminin 5. We report a 64-year-old Japanese woman with a subepidermal blistering disease associated with lymph node metastasis of ovarian clear cell carcinoma 10 years after its surgical treatment. Clinical features showed severe blisters and erosions on multiple mucous membranes (i.e. lip, oral cavity, nose, eye, genitalia and anus) and on both the periungual and subungual regions. This is the first report in which an immunoblot analysis revealed the unusual combination of autoantibodies to both the p200 antigen and the gamma 2 subunit of laminin 5.
We recently encountered a 2-year-old boy with slightly infiltrative brown papules on the face, trunk, and extremities. Stroking of one of the papules produced an urticarial wheal (positive Darier's sign). Histopathologic tests revealed a dense infiltration of mast cells containing numerous granules and showing metachromasia under Toluidine blue staining. Immunohistochemical tests revealed that these cells were positive for CD68 and for c-kit. In addition, dermal dendritic cells that were positive for S100 and CD1a immunostaining were intermingled with the mast cells. We confirmed through electron microscopy that the dermal dendritic cells that were observed adjacent to the infiltration of mast cells had Birbeck granules in their cytoplasm, namely Langerhans cells. However, because of the greater numbers of mast cells than Langerhans cells, and because of the absence of both monomorphic LC proliferation and systemic symptoms of Langerhans cell histiocytosis, the present case favors a diagnosis of cutaneous mastocytosis in a child with Langerhans cell infiltration.
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