International Journal of Research in Medical Sciences | September 2017 | Vol 5 | Issue 9 Page 3869
International Journal of Research in Medical Sciences
Srinivas T et al. Int J Res Med Sci. 2017 Sep;5(9):3869-3874
www.msjonline.org pISSN 2320-6071 | eISSN 2320-6012
Original Research Article
Granulomatous dermatosis: histopathological study in
a tertiary care hospital
Teerthanath Srinivas
1
, Hariprasad S.
2
*
INTRODUCTION
Granulomatous dermatosis has identical histological
pattern may be produced by several causes, and
conversely, a single cause may produce several
histological patterns.
1
Granuloma was originally thought
to represent a neoplastic growth of granulation tissue,
“Granuloma” now implies a reactive, nonneoplastic,
inflammatory tissue reaction.
2
Granulomatous inflammation is best defined as special
variety of chronic inflammation in which granuloma is
formed in response to insoluble, nondegradable or slowly
1
Department of of Pathology, K S Hegde Medical Academy, Deralakatte, Mangalore, Karnataka, India
2
Department of Surgery, Navodaya Medical College, Mantralayam Road, Navodaya Nagar, Raichur, Karnataka, India
Received: 24 July 2017
Accepted: 28 July 2017
*Correspondence:
Dr. Hariprasad S.,
E-mail: raohariprasads@yahoo.co.in
Copyright: © the author(s), publisher and licensee Medip Academy. This is an open-access article distributed under
the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License, which permits unrestricted non-commercial
use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
ABSTRACT
Background: Granulomatous dermatosis shares the histological finding of granuloma formation; it is usually formed
because of the persistence of a non-degradable product of active hypersensitivity. The identical histological picture
may be produced by several causes, which pose a diagnostic challenge to dermatopathologist, Present study aims at
classifying cutaneous granulomatous dermatosis based on the morphology and aetiology of granulomas, and to
highlight its significance for specific clinical diagnosis.
Methods: A retrospective analysis of skin biopsy was done and cases of cutaneous granulomatous lesions diagnosed
on histopathological examination were retrieved for a period of 8 years. Clinical data and diagnosis were retrieved
from hospital records. Hematoxylin and eosin stained paraffin sections were reviewed. The morphological pattern of
granuloma was classified into sarcoidal, necrotizing, necrobiotic and suppurative granulomas and further aetiological
evaluation for the granulomatous dermatosis were done using various special stains like Periodic Acid Schiff stain,
Fite-Farraco stain, Gomori methenamine silver stain and acid-fast bacilli stain.
Results: A total of 228 cases of cutaneous granulomatous lesion were retrieved; out of these 93cases (40.79%) were
sarcoidal granuloma type, 83cases (36.40%) were of suppurative granulomas, 29 cases (12.72%) were of necrobiotic
granulomas, 20 cases (8.77%) were necrotizing granuloma and 3 cases (1.32%) had granulomatous dermatitis with
vasculitis. Infective aetiology was the commonest cause for granulomatous dermatosis (57.89%), mainly by leprosy,
tuberculosis and various fungal infection.
Conclusions: Granulomatous dermatosis has significant overlap in histopathological picture of various
granulomatous reactions. Morphology alone is seldom specific and cannot be used as diagnostic tool. It is better
understood based adequate clinical data, morphology of granuloma, special stains and laboratory workup in arriving
at a etiology specific diagnosis for definitive clinical management.
Keywords: Dermatosis, Granulomas, Infective granulomas, Vasculitis
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.18203/2320-6012.ijrms20173659