During 1991-94, tissue specimens from 262 young chicken carcasses condemned at slaughter contained novel multicentric proliferations of histiocytelike cells. These tissues had been submitted to the USDA FSIS Eastern Laboratory because of grossly enlarged spleens, livers, or kidneys. The spleens were two to three times normal diameter and contained miliary white or yellow 1-3-mm foci. Similar miliary foci were present throughout the enlarged livers and kidneys. Microscopic examination of these tissues revealed discrete circular nodules expanding splenic periarteriolar lymphoid sheaths, hepatic periportal nodules, and discrete perivascular and more diffuse interstitial nodules replacing renal tubules. Nodules also were present in the pancreas, bone marrow, proventriculus, and lung, with more diffuse infiltrates in intestinal lamina propria. The cells composing these nodules contained irregularly oval, folded, or pleomorphic nuclei and relatively abundant eosinophilic cytoplasm. Mitotic figures and pyknotic nuclei were common. These cells were interpreted to be histiocytes (tissue macrophages or dendritic cells) and did not resemble lymphocytes. These proliferating cells also did not resemble the cell population of commonly diagnosed lymphoid neoplasms of young chickens. No intralesional organisms were detected and polymerase chain reaction analysis failed to detect Marek's herpesvirus DNA or leukosis/sarcoma and reticuloendotheliosis proviral DNA.
An emaciated wild turkey (Meleagris gallopavo) exhibiting neurologic signs was found on Ossabaw Island, Chatham County, Georgia (USA) on 11 April 1989. The neurologic abnormalities observed included ataxia, drooping wings, head tremors, torticollis, and circling. At necropsy, discrete yellowish-white nodules, varying in size from 2 to 5 mm, were present in the spleen. White nodular lesions approximately 2 mm in diameter were observed beneath the mucosal surface of the distal esophagus. Histopathologic examination of the splenic nodules disclosed large numbers of primitive lymphoreticular cells with leptochromatic nuclei and abundant, slightly basophilic cytoplasms. The mitotic index in these cells was moderate to high. Similar neoplastic cells composed the masses observed in the esophagus. Multifocal, mild perivascular cuffing with mononuclear cells was found in the lumbar spinal cord, brain, and brain stem. Reticuloendotheliosis virus, subtype 3, was isolated from samples of the spleen and liver.
Abstract. Three adult female dairy cattle with pulmonary blastomas were evaluated. The gross lesions at postmortem were described as multiple white circumscribed masses throughout the lungs, with pleural involvement in one cow and lymph node metastasis in the other two cows. Histologically, the tumors contained a dual population of mesenchymal and epithelial neoplastic cells. Epithelial cells formed nests, tubules, and formations resembling bronchioles of normal lung. Mesenchymal cells were spindle shaped with oval nuclei and fibrillar eosinophilic cytoplasm, were large rounded cells with multiple round nuclei and granular eosinophilic cytoplasm, or appeared blast-like, with large hyperchromatic nuclei and amphophilic cytoplasm. The tumors varied greatly in appearance from one field to another within the same tumor. Epithelial cells stained positively with anticytokeratin antibodies. Some spindle-shaped mesenchymal cells exhibited smooth muscle cell differentiation with positive staining with anti-vimentin, anti-muscle-specific actin, and anti-smooth muscle actin antibodies, whereas other rounded mesenchymal cells expressed striated muscle cell differentiation with multiple nuclei and positivity to anti-neuron-specific enolase and anti-muscle-specific actin antibodies. The variable expression of the intermediate filaments and cytoplasmic enzymes indicates multiple pathways of differentiation in the pulmonary blastomas.
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