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Dive into the research topics where Luis Requena is active.

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Featured researches published by Luis Requena.


Journal of The American Academy of Dermatology | 2011

Adverse reactions to injectable soft tissue fillers

Luis Requena; Celia Requena; Lise Christensen; Ute S. Zimmermann; Heinz Kutzner; Lorenzo Cerroni

In recent years, injections with filler agents are often used for wrinkle-treatment and soft tissue augmentation by dermatologists and plastic surgeons. Unfortunately, the ideal filler has not yet been discovered and all of them may induce adverse reactions. Quickly biodegradable or resorbable agents may induce severe complications, but they will normally disappear spontaneously in a few months. Slowly biodegradable or nonresorbable fillers may give rise to severe reactions that show little or no tendency to spontaneous improvement. They may appear several years after the injection, when the patient does not remember which product was injected, and treatment is often insufficient. In this review, we discuss the most commonly used fillers, their most frequent adverse reactions as well as the characteristic histopathologic findings that allow the identification of the injected filler agent. In conclusion, histopathologic study remains as the gold standard technique to identify the responsible filler.


American Journal of Dermatopathology | 2001

Adverse reactions to injectable aesthetic microimplants.

Celia Requena; María José Izquierdo; Miguel Navarro; Antonio Martinez; Juan J. Vilata; Rafael Botella; Jorge Amorrortu; Vicente Sabater; Adolfo Aliaga; Luis Requena

New inert materials such as polymerized silicones, Bioplastique, Artecoll, and Dermalive are now being used as injectable aesthetic microimplants. These substances are better than the old ones because they tend not to migrate and do not usually produce much of a host immune response. Adverse reactions after injection of these materials are rare, although there are a few reported cases as a result of bad technique or anomalous granulomatous reactions. We report on four patients with unsightly results after cosmetic microimplants, including one of Artecoll, one of Dermalive (to the best of our knowledge, the latter is the first such case reported), and two of silicone. This report describes the histopathologic features of cutaneous reactions to these injectable aesthetic materials.


Journal of The American Academy of Dermatology | 1995

Cutaneous tuberculosis: A clinical, histopathologic, and bacteriologic study

M del Carmen Fariña; M.Isabel Gegundez; Enric Piqué; Jaime Esteban; Lucía Martín; Luis Requena; Antonio Barat; Manuel L. Fernández Guerrero

BACKGROUND In recent years cutaneous infections with Mycobacterium tuberculosis with an atypical clinical appearance have become more common because of the increasing number of immunocompromised patients. OBJECTIVE We report the clinical, histopathologic, and bacteriologic data of 11 patients with several forms of cutaneous tuberculosis seen during the past 14 years. METHODS Patients from whom M. tuberculosis was isolated from culture of skin biopsy specimens, sinus drainage, or material aspirated from cutaneous abscesses were included. In all but two patients a biopsy specimen was obtained for histopathologic study. All but one patient received combined antituberculous therapy. RESULTS The clinical diagnoses were scrofuloderma (four cases), cutaneous miliary tuberculosis (two), lupus vulgaris (two), tuberculous gumma (two), and one unclassified. All but three patients had evidence of either previous or simultaneous tuberculous foci other than in the skin. Histopathologic findings varied according to the type of cutaneous tuberculosis. CONCLUSION In some patients with cutaneous tuberculosis, lesions are atypical in appearance because of immunodeficiency. Culture for M. tuberculosis should be performed in all suspected cases, even in those in whom special stains for acid-fast bacilli are negative.


Journal of Cutaneous Pathology | 1996

Cutaneous adult myofibroma: a vascular neoplasm

Luis Requena; Heinz Kutzner; Heino Hügel; Arno Rütten; Vicente Furió

Infantile myofibromatosis is a distinctive type of fibromatosis that usually develops during the immediate perinatal period. There are variants with solitary and multiple tumors. Lesions confined to the skin, soft tissue, and bone carry a good prognosis, showing spontaneous regression. The prognosis, however, is much less favorable when visceral lesions are present and the outcome may be fatal. Only recently it became obvious that there is an adult counterpart of infantile myofibromatosis, characterized by solitary lesions that have a predilection for involve the dermis and show no tendency to regression, although they have an entirely benign biological behavior. These lesions have been named cutaneous myofibroma or solitary myofibroma of adults.


Journal of The American Academy of Dermatology | 2010

Chronic atypical neutrophilic dermatosis with lipodystrophy and elevated temperature (CANDLE) syndrome.

Antonio Torrelo; Sapna Patel; Isabel Colmenero; Dolores Gurbindo; Francisco Lendínez; Angela Hernández; Juan Carlos López-Robledillo; Ali Dadban; Luis Requena; Amy S. Paller

Several syndromes manifest as recurrent daily fevers, skin lesions, and multisystem inflammation. We describe 4 patients with early-onset recurrent fevers, annular violaceous plaques, persistent violaceous eyelid swelling, low weight and height, lipodystrophy, hepatomegaly, and a range of visceral inflammatory manifestations. Laboratory abnormalities included chronic anemia, elevated acute-phase reactants, and raised liver enzymes. Histopathologic examination of lesional skin showed atypical mononuclear infiltrates of myeloid lineage and mature neutrophils. Our patients have a distinctive early-onset, chronic inflammatory condition with atypical or immature myeloid infiltrates in the skin. We propose the acronym CANDLE (chronic atypical neutrophilic dermatosis with lipodystrophy and elevated temperature) syndrome for this newly described disorder, which is probably genetic in origin.


The American Journal of Surgical Pathology | 2010

Cutaneous manifestations of blastic plasmacytoid dendritic cell neoplasm-morphologic and phenotypic variability in a series of 33 patients.

Carlo Cota; Esmeralda Vale; Isabel Viana; Luis Requena; Gerardo Ferrara; J Lucia Anemona; Dieter Metze; Regina Fink-Puches; Thomas Wiesner; Lorenzo Cerroni

Blastic plasmacytoid dendritic cell neoplasm (BPDCN) is a neoplasm derived from precursors of plasmacytoid dendritic cells. Cutaneous involvement represents often the first manifestation of the disease. We studied 45 skin biopsies from 33 patients (M:F=7.25:1; median age: 71 y; age range: 30 to 89) with BPDCN to delineate histopathologic and immunophenotypic features of this disease. Patients presented with generalized (n=18), localized (n=6), or solitary (n=9) macules, plaques, and/or tumors. Staging investigations at presentation were negative in 20 patients. Unusual histologic features included a perivascular/periadnexal pattern (6 biopsies from 4 patients) and the presence of pleomorphism of neoplastic cells with blastoid cells admixed with elongated, twisted, or hyperchromatic cells (observed in 24 specimens). Negativity of 1 among the 4 markers CD4, CD56, CD123, and TCL-1 was seen in 11 biopsies, and of 2 markers in 4 biopsies. Staining for CD68 revealed positivity of the majority of cells in 1 and of scattered cells in 24/37 stained cases. Terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase was observed in 22/37 stained cases. Staining for Bcl-6, MUM-1 and FOX-P1 revealed positivity of a variable proportion of neoplastic cells in 16/30, 19/29, and 21/23 cases, respectively. Our study shows that cutaneous lesions of BPDCN display a greater variability of morphologic and phenotypic features than recognized earlier. Discrete perivascular infiltrates, pleomorphic morphology of neoplastic cells, and unusual phenotypic profiles may be the source of diagnostic pitfalls. These atypical variants should be recognized to make an early diagnosis and to manage properly patients with this aggressive hematological disorder.


Journal of Cutaneous Pathology | 2003

Cutaneous myoepithelial neoplasms: clinicopathologic and immunohistochemical study of 20 cases suggesting a continuous spectrum ranging from benign mixed tumor of the skin to cutaneous myoepithelioma and myoepithelial carcinoma.

Thomas Mentzel; Luis Requena; Steven Kaddu; Luis M. Soares de Aleida; Omar P. Sangueza; Heinz Kutzner

Background:  Myoepithelial neoplasms, both benign and malignant, are rare but well‐established clinicopathologic entities in the salivary glands, the breast, and the lung. Despite similarities between cutaneous sweat glands and glandular structures in the above‐mentioned organs as well as the presence of regular myoepithelial cells around cutaneous eccrine/apocrine glands, the concept of cutaneous myoepithelial neoplasms is still debatable and not commonly accepted.


American Journal of Dermatopathology | 2012

Cutaneous metastases from internal malignancies: a clinicopathologic and immunohistochemical review.

Inmaculada Alcaraz; Lorenzo Cerroni; Arno Rütten; Heinz Kutzner; Luis Requena

Abstract: Skin metastases occur in 0.6%–10.4% of all patients with cancer and represent 2% of all skin tumors. Skin metastases from visceral malignancies are important for dermatologists and dermatopathologists because of their variable clinical appearance and presentation, frequent delay and failure in their diagnosis, relative proportion of different internal malignancies metastasizing to the skin, and impact on morbidity, prognosis, and treatment. Another factor to take into account is that cutaneous metastasis may be the first sign of clinically silent visceral cancer. The relative frequencies of metastatic skin disease tend to correlate with the frequency of the different types of primary cancer in each sex. Thus, women with skin metastases have the following distribution in decreasing order of frequency of primary malignancies: breast, ovary, oral cavity, lung, and large intestine. In men, the distribution is as follows: lung, large intestine, oral cavity, kidney, breast, esophagus, pancreas, stomach, and liver. A wide morphologic spectrum of clinical appearances has been described in cutaneous metastases. This variable clinical morphology included nodules, papules, plaques, tumors, and ulcers. From a histopathologic point of view, there are 4 main morphologic patterns of cutaneous metastases involving the dermis, namely, nodular, infiltrative, diffuse, and intravascular. Generally, cutaneous metastases herald a poor prognosis. The average survival time of patients with skin metastases is a few months. In this article, we review the clinicopathologic and immunohistochemical characteristics of cutaneous metastases from internal malignancies, classify the most common cutaneous metastases, and identify studies that may assist in diagnosing the origin of a cutaneous metastasis.


American Journal of Dermatopathology | 2008

Desmoplastic Malignant Melanoma : A Clinicopathologic Analysis of 113 Cases

Luís Soares de Almeida; Luis Requena; Arno Rütten; Heinz Kutzner; Claus Garbe; Dinis Pestana; Manuel Marques Gomes

Desmoplastic melanoma (DM) is a rare variant of spindle cell melanoma, which usually develops in sun-damaged skin of elderly patients. Often the lesion is nonpigmented and frequently mistaken for a nonmelanocytic proliferation, which delays diagnosis and treatment and therefore worsens the prognosis.The spindle shape of neoplastic melanocytes, the prominent desmoplasia, and the frequent neurotropism of neoplastic melanocytes are its most characteristic histopathological features.We have studied the clinicopathologic features of 113 cases of DM. The mean age of the patients was 71.1 years; 48% of the patients were males and 52% were females. The neoplasm was located on the head in 72% of the cases. Malignant melanoma was the initial clinical diagnosis in only 27% of the cases.Histopathologically, all lesions appeared as poorly demarcated neoplasms that involved the entire dermis and often extended into the subcutaneous tissue. The neoplasms were composed of ill-defined fascicles of spindle cells. Desmoplasia was defined as the presence of spindle cells associated with a fibrotic stroma. Fifty-one cases (45%) were classified as “pure DM” when the lesion was entirely desmoplastic, and 62 cases (55%) were considered as “combined DM” when a recognizable desmoplastic component was seen in an otherwise conventional malignant melanoma. In 81% of the cases, an atypical intraepidermal melanocytic component (in situ malignant melanoma) was identified, whereas in the remaining 19% of the cases the intraepidermal component was lacking. Seventy-one percent of the cases were histologically amelanotic, 23% showed a small amount of pigment, and only 6% were heavily pigmented. Neural involvement was identified in 40/113 cases (35%), predominantly in the thickest tumors. Lymphoid nodules, found in 42/113 cases (37%), were significantly more frequent in pure DM than in combined DM (53% vs 24%). The null hypothesis of homogeneity of the “pure” and “combined” subgroups should be rejected (P < 0.002). Solar elastosis, with variable intensity, was seen in 82% of the cases. Mean Breslow thickness was 4.1 mm (4.6/3.7 mm, in the pure/combined subgroups, respectively), median was 4.0 mm (4.0/3.0 mm); Breslow thickness ranged from 0.3 to 11.0 mm, with half of the cases thicker than 4 mm. Only 4% of the cases showed Clark level below IV. The predominant neoplastic cells consisted of spindle-shaped melanocytes in 85% of the cases, whereas the remaining 15% of the cases demonstrated round neoplastic cells forming the main mass of the neoplasm. The mitotic rate of the neoplastic cells was low in 72% of the cases, 23% had an intermediate mitotic rate, and 5% showed a high mitotic rate.On follow-up, 55/113 patients (49%) (with an average of 55 months) demonstrated persistence of the disease. About 4% had local recurrences, 2% of lymph node invasion, 9% systemic metastases, and 12% died from the disease (2 cases of pure DM and 5 cases of combined DM).Although a better prognosis has been postulated for DM when compared with conventional cutaneous malignant melanomas of the same thickness, in most cases, a DM is diagnosed only in established long-standing and thick melanomas. Therefore, dermatologists and dermatopathologists should be more aware of this clinicopathologic variant of cutaneous malignant melanoma.


Journal of The American Academy of Dermatology | 1988

Chemical warfare: cutaneous lesions from mustard gas

Luis Requena; C. Requena; M. Sánchez; G. Jaqueti; A. Aguilar; E. Sánchez-Yus; B. Hernández-Moro

Cutaneous lesions of eight patients evacuated from the Iran-Iraq war zone are reported. The patients were exposed to mustard gas, and there was a spectrum of dermatologic lesions. In the mild cases only there was a sunburnlike erythema, but in the most severe cases this erythema was followed by large and disseminated bullae, which histologically showed a subepidermal location with full-thickness epidermal necrosis. The resorption of these blisters was followed by hyperpigmentation, which was more evident in the intertriginous areas. In these last cases there also were ocular, respiratory, and gastrointestinal manifestations. In the skin this mustard gas seems to act through a primary irritant mechanism and without allergic contact sensitization.

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Heinz Kutzner

Medical University of Graz

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Lucía Martín

Autonomous University of Madrid

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Evaristo Sánchez Yus

Complutense University of Madrid

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E. Sanchez Yus

Complutense University of Madrid

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Lorenzo Cerroni

Medical University of Graz

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Ana María Molina-Ruiz

Autonomous University of Madrid

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