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Melanosis coli

Melanosis coli
Melanosis coli.jpg
Melanosis coli identified on colonoscopy as a brownish moiré pattern on the wall of the colon.
Classification and external resources
ICD-10 K63.8
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Melanosis coli, also pseudomelanosis coli, is a disorder of pigmentation of the wall of the colon, often identified at the time of colonoscopy. It is benign, and may have no significant correlation with disease. The brown pigment is lipofuscin in macrophages, not melanin.

The most common cause of melanosis coli is the extended use of laxatives, and commonly anthraquinone containing laxatives such as senna, aloe vera and other plant glycosides. The anthranoid laxatives pass through the gastrointestinal tract unabsorbed until they reach the large intestine, where they are changed into their active forms. The resulting active compounds cause damage to the cells in the lining of the intestine and leads to apoptosis (a form of cell death). The damaged (apoptotic) cells appear as darkly pigmented bodies that may be taken up by scavenger cells known as macrophages. When enough cells have been damaged, the characteristic pigmentation of the bowel wall develops. The condition can develop after just a few months of laxative use.

However, other causes are identified, including an increase in colonic epithelial apoptosis.Endoscopically, the mucosa may show a brownish discoloration in a moire pattern.

On biopsy, melanosis coli shows characteristic pigment-laden macrophages within the mucosa on PAS staining.

The histologic differential diagnosis of mucosal pigmentation is: lipofuscin (melanosis coli), hemosiderin-laden macrophages, and melanin (rare).

Micrograph showing melanosis coli, which appears as brown pigmentation in the macrophages in the lamina propria.


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