8.10 Aged Skin

Grading & Level of Importance: B

ICD-11

EE40.Y

Synonyms

Dermatoporosis (aged skin).

Structure and Physiology

Ethnicity-specific aging characteristics.


Caucasians: greater skin wrinkle formation and sagging
Asians: Pigment spot intensity.
 
Professional extrinsic characteristic: indoor vs outdoor workers; nutritional and living behaviours.

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Ethnicity-specific ageing characteristics.

Caucasians: greater skin wrinkle formation and sagging with an earlier onset. More prone to skin desquamation.

Afro-American and Caucasian women: higher prevalence of age-related dryness.

Asian women: Later wrinkling in the facial area, more sensitive to mechanical stimuli and exogenous chemicals, pigment spot intensity as cardinal skin ageing sign.

Intrinsically (genetically/hormonally) aged skin: macroscopically thin and atrophic, exhibits fine wrinkles, subcutaneous fat loss, prominent dryness and reduced elasticity in areas which are not light (sun)-exposed inner side of the upper arm and the gluteal region.

Extrinsically (photo-) aged skin: deeper wrinkles, thickening of the epidermis, dullness, roughness and mottled discoloration in constantly UV-exposed skin regions, facial skin, hand skin. Telangiectasias and pigmentary discoloration might also be observed in advanced and severe degrees of photoaging.

Definition

Natural process of biochemical and immunological events, leading to gradual cell damage accumulation, decreased local immune response and development of various benign or malignant skin changes or diseases.

Development

Gradually disturbance of biological processes including lipid barrier, angiogenesis, sweat production, deterioration of the epidermal immune response, wound healing, and production of calcitriol, but also development of cellular heterogeneity. Endogenous variables such as genetic predisposition, impairment of cellular metabolic pathways, qualitative and quantitative hormonal alterations (intrinsic ageing) and exogenous factors, such as ultraviolet irradiation, chemicals and toxins, pollution and smoking (extrinsic aging).

Biochemistry

Aged skin exhibits increase of oxidative stress-inducing molecules as well as reduction of niacin, vitamins C and E, co-enzyme Q10, α-lipoic acid, growth hormone, sexual hormones.

Aetiology & Pathogenesis

Genetic predisposition, impairment of cellular metabolic and immunologic pathways, qualitative and quantitative hormonal alterations (intrinsic aging) and natural or artificial ultraviolet irradiation, stress, smoking, alcohol, chemicals and toxins, pollution (extrinsic aging).

Signs & Symptoms

Intrinsically aged skin: macroscopically thin and atrophic skin, exhibits fine wrinkles, subcutaneous fat loss, prominent dryness and reduced elasticity.

 

Extrinsically aged skin: deeper wrinkles, thickening of the epidermis varying, dullness, roughness and mottled discoloration. Telangiectasias  (severe photoaging).

Localisation

Intrinsic aging: inner side of the upper arm and the gluteal region.


Extrinsic aging: UV exposed sites  (head and neck, hands).

Classification

- Intrinsic aging

- Extrinsic aging

Laboratory & other workups

Photographic severity scales, other imagine methods (laser profiling). 

Dermatopathology

Light-protected skin: Epidermal thinning (10–50%), decreased mitotic activity, decrease of Langerhans cells, reduction of dermal thickness, atrophy of the extracellular matrix, decrease of skin appendages, thinning of subcutaneous fat.


Light-exposed skin: Epidermal thickening varying, impaired proliferation, and differentiation of keratinocytes, sparce distribution of collagen fibers, broken elastic fibers and accumulation (actinic elastosis) increased  mast cells and neutrophils, marked regression and loss of vascular pattern

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Light-protected skin: Epidermal thinning (10-50%), atrophy of the stratum spinosum, increased heterogeneity in size of basal cells, decreased mitotic activity, flattening of the dermoepidermal junction decrease and heterogeneity of melanocytes, decrease of Langerhans cells, reduction of dermal thickness, atrophy of the extracellular matrix, reduction and disintegration of collagen and elastic fibers, reduction of cutaneous microvasculature, decrease of skin appendages, thinning of subcutaneous fat.

Light-exposed skin: Epidermal thickening, impaired proliferation, and differentiation of keratinocytes, sparse distribution of collagen fibers, stellate phenotype of fibroblasts increases in mast cells and neutrophils, flattening of the dermoepidermal junction, thickening of the vascular walls of arterial and venous capillaries, marked regression and disorganization of small blood vessels.

Immunology

With advanced age the number of the antigen-presenting Langerhans cells (LCs) significantly decreases. The cells undergo morphologic alterations, reduced antigen-trapping capacity, and diminished cutaneous immune function. In photoprotected skin, TNF-α–induced LC migration is significantly affected, and LCs exhibit reduced response to TNF-α stimulation, leading to limited TNF-α-induced perivascular polymorphonuclear infiltrates in inflammatory reaction, making aged skin susceptible to infections.

Course

Gradual development in healthy individuals. In women, rapid progression after menopause.

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Gradual development in healthy individuals. In women, rapid progression in approx. 10 years after menopause. Quick development in progeria syndromes.

Aged skin risks the development of common skin lesions (e.g., dry skin, pruritus, telangiectasias, senile purpura, freckling, lentigines, guttate hypomelanosis, stellate pseudoscars, solar comedones, colloid milia, lichen sclerosus et atrophicus).

It is also prone to

  • Benign tumors (e.g. seborrheic keratoses, cherry angiomas).

  • Premalignant tumors (e.g. actinic keratosis, Morbus Bowen, lentigo maligna).

  • Malignant tumors (e.g., basal cell carcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma, malignant melanoma, cutaneous lymphomas, angiosarcoma, Merkel cell carcinoma, Kaposi sarcoma, atypical fibroxanthoma, sebaceous carcinoma, cutaneous metastases).

  • Infectious diseases (e.g. dermatophytosis, cellulitis, zoster).

  • Bullous dermatoses (e.g. bullous pemphigoid, pemphigus vulgaris).

  • Autoimmune diseases (e.g., contact dermatitis, atopic dermatitis, vitiligo, psoriasis, lupus erythematosus).

  • Lichen simplex chronicus.

  • Pressure ulcers, lower extremity ulcers.

  • Vulvodynia, glossodynia, atrophic balanitis.

Complications

Increased vulnerability.

Diagnosis

Clinical signs, comparison of pictures from various phases of life. 

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Clinical signs, photographic severity scales and other imagine methods assess the severity of skin ageing features. Fluorescent detection of Advanced Glycosylated Elements (AGEs) at the frontal forearm area.

Differential Diagnosis

Progeria syndromes, hormonal deficiencies, metabolic disturbances (internal diseases).

Prevention & Therapy

Consequent avoidance of overexposure to extrinsic factors, diagnosis and treatment of underlying internal diseases (the skin is mirror of the body).

 

Various medico- cosmetic and surgical procedures.

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Consequent avoidance of overexposure to extrinsic factors, diagnosis and treatment of underlying internal diseases (the skin is mirror of the body), regular topical care and systemic and nutritional uptake of antioxidants (vitamins D, C, E, carotenoids).

Moderate to severe skin ageing: skin anti-aging cosmetics, camouflage (make-up), chemical peelings, dermabrasion, ultrasound energy devices, LASER resurfacing.

Deeper, severe aging: injection of botulinum toxin or fillers, collagen or hyaluronic acid injections, own fat, Gore-Tex implants.

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