4.6 Article

Pacinian Corpuscles as a Diagnostic Clue of Ledderhose Disease-A Case Report and Mapping of Pacinian Corpuscles of the Sole

Journal

DIAGNOSTICS
Volume 12, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics12071705

Keywords

fibromatosis; Ledderhose disease; mapping; Pacinian corpuscles; immunohistochemistry; differential diagnosis

Funding

  1. Gerencia Regional de Salud de Castilla y Leon [GRS2164/A/2020, GRS2379/A/21]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study reports alterations in Pacinian corpuscles in patients with plantar fibromatosis. Compared to normal individuals, patients with plantar fibromatosis showed a significant increase in the number of Pacinian corpuscles, as well as abnormal structure and immunohistochemical profile.
Background: Plantar fibromatosis, known as Ledderhose disease, is a neoplastic disease characterized by a locally-aggressive bland fibroblastic proliferation. Although Pacinian corpuscles alterations are commonly described in palmar fibromatosis, there are still no references about Pacinian corpuscles alterations in the rarer plantar version. Methods: We present a case report where a wide cutaneous resection, including the plantar fascia was performed, allowing a detailed study of Pacinian corpuscles. Pacinian corpuscles were analyzed using immunohistochemistry for neurofilament proteins, S100 protein, CD34, vimentin, glucose transporter 1, epithelial membrane antigen, neural-cell adhesion molecule, actin, desmin, type IV collagen, and high-affinity neurotrophin Trk-receptors. Moreover, the density and the size of the corpuscles were determined. Results: A clear increase in the number (hyperplasia) of Pacinian corpuscles was evidenced in the Ledderhose disease plantar fascia in comparison with similarly aged normal subjects. Pacinian hypertrophy was not demonstrated, but a significant decrease in the number of corpuscular lamellae was noted, with a subsequent increase in the interlamellar spaces. Pacinian corpuscles from the pathological plantar fascia showed an abnormal structure and immunohistochemical profile, generally without identifiable axons, and also absence of an inner core or an intermediate layer. Moreover, other molecules related with trophic maintenance of corpuscles were also absent. Finally, a vascular proliferation was commonly noted in some corpuscles, which involved all corpuscular constituents. Conclusion: The observed Pacinian corpuscles hyperplasia could be considered a diagnostic clue of plantar fibromatosis.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available