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Erschienen in: International Journal of Legal Medicine 6/2003

01.12.2003 | Original Article

Affinity cytochemistry analysis of mast cells in skin lesions: a possible tool to assess the timing of lesions after death

verfasst von: A. Bonelli, S. Bacci, G. A. Norelli

Erschienen in: International Journal of Legal Medicine | Ausgabe 6/2003

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Abstract

The histamine content in vital wounds is known to increase, with a zenith after 3 h, and then decrease until 24 h after wounding. We addressed whether this biochemical alteration has a morphological counterpart. Since the main source of skin histamine are mast cells, the distribution and number of these cells was assessed upon labeling with fluorescent avidin and with antibodies to the mast cell specific enzymes, chymase and tryptase. Analyses were performed on skin from 15 healthy controls (from surgical biopsies), from 15 post-mortem lesions and 75 vital lesions, obtained at autopsy from subjects who had survived from a few seconds to 24 h. The number of mast cells per unit area of section surface increased progressively with survival time, up to a maximum in subjects who survived 1–3 h (p<0.01), and decreased thereafter becoming less than in the controls if lesions had occurred earlier than 6 h before death (p<0.01). Samples from post-mortem lesions had significantly fewer mast cells than those of any other groups of samples (p<0.01). We suggest that in association to other histological and circumstantial evidence the analysis of mast cells by affinity cytochemistry can help to discriminate vital from post-mortem lesions and to estimate survival time after lesions.
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Metadaten
Titel
Affinity cytochemistry analysis of mast cells in skin lesions: a possible tool to assess the timing of lesions after death
verfasst von
A. Bonelli
S. Bacci
G. A. Norelli
Publikationsdatum
01.12.2003
Verlag
Springer-Verlag
Erschienen in
International Journal of Legal Medicine / Ausgabe 6/2003
Print ISSN: 0937-9827
Elektronische ISSN: 1437-1596
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00414-003-0396-1

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