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Dive into the research topics where Helmut Beltraminelli is active.

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Featured researches published by Helmut Beltraminelli.


American Journal of Dermatopathology | 2009

Primary Cutaneous CD4+ Small-/Medium-Sized Pleomorphic T-Cell Lymphoma: A Cutaneous Nodular Proliferation of Pleomorphic T Lymphocytes of Undetermined Significance? A Study of 136 Cases

Helmut Beltraminelli; Bernd Leinweber; Helmut Kerl; Lorenzo Cerroni

Patients with skin nodules characterized by the infiltrate of pleomorphic small/medium T lymphocytes are currently classified as “primary cutaneous CD4+ small-/medium-sized pleomorphic T-cell lymphoma” (SMPTCL) or as T-cell pseudolymphoma. The distinction is often arbitrary, and patients with similar clinicopathologic features have been included in both groups. We studied 136 patients (male:female = 1:1; median age: 53 years, age range: 3-90 years) with cutaneous lesions that could be classified as small-/medium-sized pleomorphic T-cell lymphoma according to current diagnostic criteria. All but 3 patients presented with solitary nodules located mostly on the head and neck area (75%). Histopathologic features were characterized by nonepidermotropic, nodular, or diffuse infiltrates of small- to medium-sized pleomorphic T lymphocytes. A monoclonal rearrangement of the T-cell receptor-γ gene was found in 60% of tested cases. Follow-up data available for 45 patients revealed that 41 of them were alive without lymphoma after a median time of 63 months (range: 1-357 months), whereas 4 were alive with cutaneous disease (range: 2-16 months). The incongruity between the indolent clinical course and the worrying histopathologic and molecular features poses difficulties in classifying these cases unambiguously as benign or malignant, and it may be better to refer to them with a descriptive term such as “cutaneous nodular proliferation of pleomorphic T lymphocytes of undetermined significance,” rather than forcing them into one or the other category. On the other hand, irrespective of the name given to these equivocal cutaneous lymphoid proliferations, published data support a nonaggressive therapeutic strategy, particularly for patients presenting with solitary lesions.


British Journal of Dermatology | 2012

Clinical presentation and diagnostic delay in bullous pemphigoid: a prospective nationwide cohort

R. della Torre; Christophe Combescure; Begonia Cortés; G. Marazza; Helmut Beltraminelli; Luigi Naldi; Luca Borradori

Summary Background  Prospective systematic analyses of the clinical presentation of bullous pemphigoid (BP) are lacking. Little is known about the time required for its diagnosis. Knowledge of the disease spectrum is important for diagnosis, management and inclusion of patients in therapeutic trials.


British Journal of Dermatology | 2011

Detection of linear IgE deposits in bullous pemphigoid and mucous membrane pemphigoid: a useful clue for diagnosis

Savaş Yayli; Nedzmidin Pelivani; Helmut Beltraminelli; U. Wirthmüller; Z. Beleznay; Michael P. Horn; Luca Borradori

Summary Background  Bullous pemphigoid (BP) is an autoimmune subepidermal blistering disease of the skin associated with IgG autoantibodies to BP180 and BP230, while mucous membrane pemphigoid (MMP) comprises a heterogeneous group of autoimmune blistering diseases characterized by a predominant mucous membrane involvement and scarring tendency associated with an autoantibody response to various autoantigens, including BP180. While the pathogenicity of IgG autoantibodies to BP180 has been demonstrated in BP, the role of IgE autoantibodies in mediating tissue damage in BP and MMP is unclear.


American Journal of Pathology | 2014

T Cells Infiltrate the Liver and Kill Hepatocytes in HLA-B∗57:01-Associated Floxacillin-Induced Liver Injury

Natascha Andrea Wuillemin; Luigi Terracciano; Helmut Beltraminelli; Christoph Schlapbach; Stefano Fontana; Stephan Krähenbühl; Werner J. Pichler; Daniel Yerly

Drug-induced liver injury is a major safety issue. It can cause severe disease and is a common cause of the withdrawal of drugs from the pharmaceutical market. Recent studies have identified the HLA-B(∗)57:01 allele as a risk factor for floxacillin (FLUX)-induced liver injury and have suggested a role for cytotoxic CD8(+) T cells in the pathomechanism of liver injury caused by FLUX. This study aimed to confirm the importance of FLUX-reacting cytotoxic lymphocytes in the pathomechanism of liver injury and to dissect the involved mechanisms of cytotoxicity. IHC staining of a liver biopsy from a patient with FLUX-induced liver injury revealed periportal inflammation and the infiltration of cytotoxic CD3(+) CD8(+) lymphocytes into the liver. The infiltration of cytotoxic lymphocytes into the liver of a patient with FLUX-induced liver injury demonstrates the importance of FLUX-reacting T cells in the underlying pathomechanism. Cytotoxicity of FLUX-reacting T cells from 10 HLA-B(∗)57:01(+) healthy donors toward autologous target cells and HLA-B(∗)57:01-transduced hepatocytes was analyzed in vitro. Cytotoxicity of FLUX-reacting T cells was concentration dependent and required concentrations in the range of peak serum levels after FLUX administration. Killing of target cells was mediated by different cytotoxic mechanisms. Our findings emphasize the role of the adaptive immune system and especially of activated drug-reacting T cells in human leukocyte antigen-associated, drug-induced liver injury.


European Journal of Dermatology | 2009

Pachydermodactyly – Just a sign of emotional distress

Helmut Beltraminelli; Peter Itin

Pachydermodactyly (PDD) is a benign, asymptomatic soft tissue swelling affecting the skin of the lateral aspects of the proximal interphalangeal joints of the fingers II-IV, mostly in young adolescent males, and could be interpreted as a consequence of tic-like behaviour as an obsessive-compulsive disorder in male adolescents. The differential diagnosis includes numerous diseases; a rapid clinical recognition of PDD would avoid many useless and expensive diagnostic tests. There is no effective medical treatment for PDD, but discontinuation of the tic-like mechanical traumatisation generally leads to a marked amelioration of the finger swelling. In this article we review the world literature, which contains 87 additional cases on this topic.


Dermatology | 2011

Amicrobial Pustulosis-Like Rash in a Patient with Crohn’s Disease under Anti-TNF-Alpha Blocker

Haur Yueh Lee; Nedzmidin Pelivani; Helmut Beltraminelli; Ivan Hegyi; Nikhil Yawalkar; Luca Borradori

Amicrobial pustulosis of the folds (APF) is a recently described entity characterized by relapsing pustular lesions predominantly involving the cutaneous flexures and scalp. This disease typically occurs in association with systemic lupus erythematosus and a variety of other autoimmune diseases. We here describe an APF-like pustular eruption predominantly affecting the scalp, face and trunk, occurring during long-term infliximab treatment for Crohn’s disease. Immunohistochemical staining of skin biopsy specimens for myxovirus resistance protein A, a marker for type 1 interferon-inducible proteins, showed increased staining in the epidermis and dermal mononuclear inflammatory infiltrate. Our observation further extends the spectrum of cutaneous adverse reactions potentially related to anti-tumor necrosis factor-α, the clinical context in which APF can occur as well as its clinical presentations.


Dermatology | 2011

Fractional transepidermal delivery: a histological analysis

Helmut Beltraminelli; Nathalie Dietrich; Thomas Hunziker

Background: In autologous cell therapy, e.g. in melanocyte transplantation for vitiligo, a minimally invasive mode of transepidermal delivery of the isolated cells is of crucial importance to reduce potential side effects such as infections and scarring as well as to minimize the duration of sick leave. Objectives:To compare the characteristics of the microscopic treatment zones induced by ablative fractional CO2 laser and by microneedle treatment in ex vivo human breast skin. Results: Ablative fractional CO2 laser treatment resulted in superficial, mainly epidermal defects reaching at most the upper papillary dermis (0.1–0.3 mm), covered by a thin eschar and coated by a small zone of collagen denaturation. Tissue injury characteristics depended on spot size as well as the energy delivered. Microneedle treatment led to thin vertical skin fissures, reaching the middermis (up to 0.5 mm) and injuring dermal blood vessels, but without surrounding tissue necrosis. Conclusions: Both technologies are able to create small epidermal defects which allow to deliver isolated cells such as melanocytes to an epidermodermal site, with microneedle treatment having the advantage of lacking devitalized tissue and eventually enabling vascular access for the transplanted cells.


JAMA Dermatology | 2013

Giant Cellulitis-like Sweet Syndrome, a New Variant of Neutrophilic Dermatosis

Andre M. Surovy; Nedzmidin Pelivani; Ivan Hegyi; Urs Buettiker; Helmut Beltraminelli; Luca Borradori

BACKGROUND Neutrophilic dermatoses comprise a wide spectrum of inflammatory diseases with overlapping features characterized histologically by the presence of an aseptic neutrophilic infiltrate in the epidermis, dermis, and/or hypodermis and are often associated with systemic inflammatory and neoplastic disorders. OBSERVATIONS We describe 3 patients with an unusual neutrophilic dermatosis characterized by relapsing episodes of fever, widespread infiltrated plaques with bullous appearance, and variable involvement of the arms, legs, abdomen, and/or trunk. Light microscopy studies showed marked edema of the papillary dermis with an inflammatory infiltrate consisting mainly of mature neutrophils. All 3 patients were morbidly obese, and workup revealed underlying cancer in 2 cases: myeloma and breast carcinoma. Management of the underlying disease resulted in long-term remission of the skin disease. CONCLUSIONS The clinicopathologic features in our 3 cases best correspond to a widespread giant cellulitis-like form of Sweet syndrome. Knowledge of this newly observed unusual variant of Sweet syndrome within the broad spectrum of neutrophilic diseases is important for its prompt and proper management.


Immunology and Allergy Clinics of North America | 2015

Eosinophilia in Dermatologic Disorders

Elisabeth Louisa de Graauw; Helmut Beltraminelli; Hans-Uwe Simon; Dagmar Simon

Eosinophil infiltration can be observed in skin disorders, such as allergic/immunologic, autoimmune, infectious, and neoplastic diseases. Clinical presentations are variable and include eczematous, papular, urticarial, bullous, nodular, and fibrotic lesions; pruritus is a common symptom in all. In this review, we present representative eosinophilic skin diseases according to their clinical pattern, together with histologic findings and diagnostic procedures. We also discuss the potential roles of eosinophils in the pathogenesis of dermatologic disorder. Current pathogenesis-based diagnostic and therapeutic approaches are outlined.


Journal of The European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology | 2016

Bowen disease of the nail unit: a retrospective study of 12 cases and their association with human papillomaviruses

Delphine Lydie Perruchoud; C Varonier; Eckart Haneke; Robert E. Hunger; Helmut Beltraminelli; Luca Borradori; A Ehnis Pérez

Bowen disease is the most frequent nail malignancy, usually seen as a verrucous plaque of the nail in men.

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