Intranuclear inclusions sometimes are observed in endometrial glands, especially during puerperium, and superficially they resemble those from herpesvirus-infected cells. To study the significance of the inclusions, endometrial and placental tissue from 215 subjects, including 69 pregnancy-associated samples, were examined. With screening by peroxidase-labeled avidin alone, followed by the peroxidase reaction, only pregnancy-related endometrium (in 32 cases) demonstrated reactivity in the intranuclear inclusions. These intranuclear inclusions demonstrated positive immunostaining for biotin using the peroxidase-antiperoxidase method in all but six cases, whereas there was no reaction for Herpes simplex in any of the cases. The endometrial tissues of the 32 cases were obtained from the 16th gestational week to the 37th postpartum day. Although the histogenesis of these intranuclear inclusions has not been clarified, they should not be mistaken for those in endometrial cells infected by herpesvirus because of intranuclear biotin and a false-positive histochemical reaction in the avidin-biotin-peroxidase complex method.
Primary effusion lymphoma (PEL) was once defined as a body cavity-based lymphoma without identifiable contiguous tumour mass, but is now recognised as an independent clinicopathological entity. The case of a 67-year-old Japanese woman with PEL is reported, in which the clinical findings showed a pericardial effusion and multiple erythema on the hypogastrium and inguinal region. The histopathological findings showed a diffuse infiltration of large neoplastic B cells from the dermis to the subcutis. After the disappearance of pericardial effusion without any treatment, she received several rounds of chemotherapy to resolve the skin eruption, but she finally died from multiple organ failure. No tumour mass was observed during the course of her disease.
Effects of dietary iodine on the induction of thyroid carcinoma using N‐nitrosobis(2 hydroxypropyl)amine (BHP) were studied. Male Wistar rats were fed with an iodine‐adequate diet (IAD group), an iodine‐rich diet (IRD group) and an iodine‐deficient diet (IDD group), respectively, until the time of sacrifice. From the 2nd experimental month, animals were injected with BHP once a week for 10 weeks. In the IAD and IRD groups, benign nodules and papillary carcinoma were found. The incidence of rats with benign nodules was 100% in both groups and animals with papillary carcinoma in the IAD and IRD groups comprised 33% and 29%, respectively. The area of the thyroid gland occupied by nodular lesions was much narrower in the IRD group than in the IAD group. In the IDD group, the thyroid showed marked enlargement due to multiple nodular proliferation of follicle cells. The incidence of rats with carcinoma was 100%, and not only papillary but also follicular carcinoma and one pulmonary metastasis were found. As the iodine content of the diet decreased, the nodular lesions increased in width and number, and the incidence of carcinoma in rats became higher. These effects of dietary iodine are probably related to the goitrogenic and/ or promoting effects of TSH. Acta Pathol Jpn 40: 705‐712, 1990.
Two cases of mixed medullary and follicular carcinoma of the thyroid (MFC) and two cases of thyroid carcinoma resembling MFC are reported with a description of their histological and immunohistochemical features. Two cases of MFC with lymph node metastasis were histologically distinguishable from each other because one had a follicular structure filled with a thyroglobulin (TG)‐positive colloid‐like substance and the other did not have it. Although one of the thyroid carcinomas resembling MFC was similar to the case of MFC with a follicular structure in its primary lesion, it showed no lymph node metastasis. The metastatic lesion of the thyroid carcinoma resembling MFC consisted of TG‐ positive cells and neighboring calcitonin (CT)‐positive cells. However the primary lesion exhibited the typical features of papillary carcinoma except for the presence of a small lesion which stained negatively for both TG and CT. The two types of tumor were not intermingled in a single tumor. These cases of thyroid carcinoma resembling MFC have a possibility of being MFC. However they should not be classified as MFC because lymph node metastasis or the coexistence of medullary carcinoma and follicular carcinoma in their primary lesion was not proved.
Parafollicular cells (C‐cells) in benign and malignant thyroid lesions were studied immunohistochemically with a polyclonal anti‐calcitonin (CT) antibody. The C‐cells were seen most frequently in the middle third of the lateral lobes in the thyroid gland of normal individuals and patients with Graves' disease and chronic thyroiditis, although in the latter the number of such cells was significantly decreased (p< 0.05). In adenomatous goiter, C‐cells were present in nodular lesions from an early stage of nodule development (frequency about 19%), whereas in the later stage these cells were rarely observed inside type 1 nodules, which were generally characterized by an admixture of follicles with considerably different sizes. However, C‐cells were not observed inside type 2 nodules, which were composed of similar‐sized follicles, or in the parenchyma of 56 cases of benign and malignant thyroid tumors. These findings suggest that since C‐cells are present in nodular lesions, the histogenesis of adenomatous goiter is quite different from that of follicular adenoma; thyroid neoplasms generally contain no C‐cells in the parenchyma. Acta Pathol Jpn 40: 187‐192, 1990.
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