Pigment change and melanocyte distribution in guinea pig skin after cutaneous freeze injury

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Abstract

Cryosurgery has been recommended for the treatment of cutaneous neoplasms, including benign and malignant melanocytic tumors. The main side effect of this treatment is pigment disruption which may be prolonged. There are no quantitative studies on melanocyte distribution after freeze injury. In this study the effect of standardized freeze times on melanocytes in guinea pig skin (tricolored) is described at the anatomic level and at the light and electron microscopic level. Melanocytes are quantified in epidermal sheets following dopa staining at 1-, 2-, and 3-month intervals after freezing. All the lesions were initially hypopigmented with a peripheral rim of hyperpigmentation. This was a transient phenomenon associated with an absence of melanocytes. Pigment migrated into the lesions so that after 3 months all the lesions on black skin were diffusely hyperpigmented. Pigment was slower to return to the red skin. Hair follicles were destroyed in the center of the lesion. The epidermal sheets demonstrated that the hyperpigmentation was an epidermal phenomenon and was associated with increased numbers of melanocytes (p < 0.001). These melanocytes were distributed evenly throughout the lesion in contrast to the irregular distribution in normal skin. © 1987.

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APA

Burge, S. M., Jones, R. L., Millard, P. R., & Dawber, R. P. R. (1987). Pigment change and melanocyte distribution in guinea pig skin after cutaneous freeze injury. Journal of Investigative Dermatology, 88(2), 136–140. https://doi.org/10.1111/1523-1747.ep12525284

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