학술논문

Cutaneous vascular calcification. Perieccrine calcification as a diagnostic key for calciphylaxis.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Cutaneous Pathology. Aug2022, Vol. 49 Issue 8, p683-691. 9p. 7 Color Photographs, 3 Charts, 2 Graphs.
Subject
*ARTERIAL calcification
*CALCIPHYLAXIS
*CALCIFICATION
*KIDNEY failure
*CALCINOSIS
*DEATH rate
Language
ISSN
0303-6987
Abstract
Background: Attempts have been made to establish discriminative criteria between classic calciphylaxis (CPX) and those cases in which cutaneous vascular calcification (CVC) represents an incidental finding (epiphenomenon). Methods: Retrospective, observational cohort study of patients with CVC to distinguish clinicopathological features between CVC as classic CPX (CVC in cutaneous lesions with erythematous–violaceous plaques with or without ulceration) or as an epiphenomenon (CVC in cutaneous lesions with known diagnosis). Different clinicopathological parameters and the presence of perieccrine calcification and pseudoxanthoma elasticum (PXE)‐like changes were evaluated. Results: Sixty‐six patients were studied. The CPX group showed a significantly higher percentage of renal failure, hypertension, altered laboratory parameters, painful lesions, and mortality rate. Histopathologically, the CPX group was associated with more than one vessel per field involved with subintimal concentric calcification and perieccrine calcification (observed exclusively in the CPX group), while PXE‐like changes, although more frequent in the CPX group, were also observed in the epiphenomenon group. Conclusion: Perieccrine calcification and the presence of more than one vessel per field involved by concentric pattern calcification could be used as a diagnostic marker of CPX. Although PXE‐like changes are not an exclusive marker, they could suggest CPX diagnosis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]