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  Vol. 128 No. 7, July 1992 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Cutaneous Nerves in Cafe au Lait Spots With White Halos in Infants With Neurofibromatosis

An Electron Microscopic Study

Motoyuki Mihara, MD, PhD; Hidetoshi Nakayama, MD; Toshiyuki Aki, MD, PhD; Tadanori Inoue, MD; Shuhei Shimao, MD, PhD

Arch Dermatol. 1992;128(7):957-961.


Abstract

• Background and Design.—
Although two cardinal skin manifestations of neurofibromatosis are cutaneous neurofibromas and cafe au lait spots, the pathogenesis of cafe au lait spots are very poorly known compared with that of cutaneous neurofibromas. Thus, the cafe au lait spots in two Japanese infants were clinically, histologically, and electron-microscopically investigated.

Observations.—
Some of the cafe au lait spots in the mongolian spots were surrounded by white halos. Histologically, in the cafe au lait spots, the epidermal basal cells had abundant melanin pigment, but macromelanosomes were not seen throughout the epidermis. In the white halo, the epidermal basal cells had a small amount of melanin pigment. Electron microscopically, the cafe au lait spots and their white halos had many subepidermal and intraepidermal nerves that belonged to free nerve endings. All the cutaneous nerves were mature. Some of the intraepidermal nerves had partially or completely naked axons that contacted tightly with the cytomembranes of the basal keratinocytes. Some of the axons in the subepidermal nerves showed degenerative changes only in the white halos. No ultrastructural pathologic changes were observed in the melanocytes, the epidermal keratinocytes, or melanosomes in those cells in the cafe au lait spots and their white halos; also, dermal melanocytes were absent in the both areas.

Conclusions.—
The increase of the cutaneous nerves and the absence of dermal melanocytes in the cafe au lait spots and their white halos may be considered as characteristic histologic cutaneous findings in infants with neurofibromatosis. However, no evidence indicates that the cutaneous nerves may participate closely in the pathogenesis of the white halos.

(Arch Dermatol. 1992;128:957-961)



Author Affiliations

From the Department of Dermatology, Faculty of Medicine, Tottori University, Yonago, Japan.


Footnotes

Accepted for publication October 19, 1991.

Reprint requests to Department of Dermatology, Faculty of Medicine, 36-1, Nishimachi, 683 Yonago, Japan (Dr Mihara).



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THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES

Association of Dermal Melanocytosis With Lysosomal Storage Disease: Clinical Features and Hypotheses Regarding Pathogenesis
Hanson et al.
Arch Dermatol 2003;139:916-920.
ABSTRACT | FULL TEXT  





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