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Folia Neuropathologica
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2/2008
vol. 46
 
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Necrobiosis lipoidica and cutaneous anaesthesia: immunohistochemical study of neural fibres

Angel Fernandez-Flores

Folia Neuropathol 2008; 46 (2): 154-157
Online publish date: 2008/06/24
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Introduction
Cutaneous anaesthesia is a common characteristic of NL. It was attributed to the destruction of nerve fibres by the inflammatory process, and a decrease in S100 positive neural fibres was presented as proof of this [1]. Nevertheless, we know nowadays that thermalgic information is mainly dependent on small fibres, either myelinated or unmyelinated. S100 protein is expressed by Schwann cells [2], and therefore it is not the best option to evaluate the unmyelinated fibres, in which one Schwann cell is shared by several axons. Even a significant decrease in axons would not necessarily equal a decrease in Schwann cells, and conversely, a decrease in Schwann cells would not necessarily equal a decrease in axons. We designed an immunohistochemical study with anti-neurofilament and peripherin, in 5 cases of NL, in order to investigate if there was a decrease of axons in cutaneous lesions.
Materials and Methods
We reviewed 5 cases of NL from our archives, and performed an immunohistochemical study on all of them, with neurofilaments (DakoCytomation neurofilament protein, mouse anti-human, clone 2F11, code N1591) in all of them. We also immunostained with peripherin antibody (Novocastra IgG2b mouse polyclonal antibody, clone PJM50). For that, sections of 4 µm were obtained from paraffin-embedded tissue. Slides were examined under a conventional light microscope, and we searched for the presence of fibres in the necrobiotic areas, as well as in the periphery of the necrobiotic areas. We used a micrometer in order to count the number of positive fibres per mm2. In the control biopsies, 10 dermal fields of 1 mm2 were selected, and the immunopositive sections of nerve fibres were counted. The average number of nerve fibres per mm2 in the dermis of control biopsies was obtained by calculating the median of all the cases. We used four controls of both markers, two skin biopsies randomly selected (one from the breast, and one from the concha). They were supposed to be used in the comparative study of the count of nerve fibres with the necrotic areas, which eventually was not needed as seen later on.
Results
The median number of nerve fibres in the control biopsies was 5.2 per mm2. The ages, genders and other relevant clinical aspects of the patients are shown in Table I. At first view, myelinated nerve trunks seemed to be hypertrophied in the areas located between the necrotic foci, while nerve fibres seemed to be absent in the necrotic areas (Fig. 1). With a closer inspection at a higher resolution, three main characteristics were evident. First, the nerve fibres were difficult to find in the necrotic areas, and they seemed to be totally absent in the central part of the necrotic foci. Second, some scattered necrotic fibres could be seen in the peripheral part of the necrotic foci. Third, the number of fibres was preserved in the inflammatory area surrounding the necrotic foci (Fig. 3). Due to the total absence of fibres in the central areas of the foci, the comparison with the dermal nerve density of the controls was not needed.
Discussion
Cutaneous anaesthesia is a common characteristic of necrobiosis lipoidica (NL) [1,3]. In 1988, a pioneer study with immunohistochemistry demonstrated that S100 positive cutaneous nerves were fewer in the skin lesions of NL [1]. Since then, many reports and classical textbooks have assumed that the destruction of the nerve fibres was the main mechanism in the pathogenesis of the anaesthesia in NL. There are nevertheless several paradoxes concerning this subject. In the first place, anaesthesia is not present in all lesions of NL, and they can even be very painful in up to 25% of cases. On the other hand, anaesthesia is a characteristic of many areas of diabetic patients (with or without NL), due to peripheral neuropathy [4]. Moreover we know nowadays that thermalgic information is mainly carried by A-delta fibres and C-fibres [5]. Although A-delta fibres are myelinated, C fibres are unmyelinated. Paradoxically, S100 protein is expressed by Schwann cells [2], and therefore it is not the best option to evaluate the unmyelinated fibres, in which one Schwann cell is shared by several axons. Even a significant decrease in axons would not necessarily equal a decrease in Schwann cells, and conversely, a decrease in Schwann cells would not necessarily equal a decrease in axons. Moreover, type 2 diabetes has been associated with an increase in denervated Schwann cells in animals [6], a fact that would not be detected by S-100 antibody. Evaluation of the nerve fibre density in skin biopsy is becoming more usual as a test which is contributory to the diagnosis of many neuropathies [7-9]. Some reports have shown a correlation between a decrease in nerve fibre density and sensory loss [10]. In our study, we used antibodies against neurofilament which, since they are expressed by neural fibres, are more reliable in the evaluation of fibre density than S100 antibody. We also used antibodies against peripherin, which recognises a type of neurofilament mainly present in the peripheral nervous system. Studies with antibodies against neurofilaments have been demonstrated by some groups to be perfectly valid for quantification of nerve fibre density [11]. Nevertheless, it should be mentioned that most groups are using the anti-protein-gene-product 9.5 (PGP 9.5) in these types of quantification studies [5,9,12]. Although some groups have defended the use of thick sections (up to 50 µm) [9], thinner sections have also been shown to be valid [12]. The quantification of the nerve fibres by using a regular light microscope, independent of image analysis systems, has been shown to be perfectly reliable and statistically acceptable [13]. We must stress the fact that we evaluated the positive dots of sections of nerve fibres. That means that if the same fibre was sectioned three times on its way up to the epidermis, it would have been counted three times in our study, in spite of being the same fibre. On the other hand, some mathematical models have been used to calculate the real number of axons per mm2 once a count with immunohistochemistry has been done [12]. The number of intraepidermal axons according to those formulae has been estimated at around 291 per mm2 [12]. The much lower number of positive dermal nerves in our control cases is not only due to the evaluation of dermal nerves instead of epidermal, but also due to the thinner sections that we used (4 µm). Our study demonstrates that there seems to be a gradient of nerve fibre density from the centre of the necrotic foci (with no fibres) to the surrounding inflammatory tissue (with preservation of the fibres). Apparently, it could be hypothesized then that following the necrosis, nerve fibre destruction might be the reason for the anaesthesia of some patients with NL. We wonder if there might be any relationship between the apparent hypertrophy of the nerve trunks that was evidenced between the necrotic foci, and the pain that a significant percentage of patients with NL can feel.
References
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Copyright: © 2008 Mossakowski Medical Research Centre Polish Academy of Sciences and the Polish Association of Neuropathologists. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/), allowing third parties to copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format and to remix, transform, and build upon the material, provided the original work is properly cited and states its license.
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