Epithelial Hyperplasia

Author(s):  
D. Amy ◽  
T. Tot ◽  
G. Botta
Author(s):  
V. F. Allison ◽  
G. C. Fink ◽  
G. W. Cearley

It is well known that epithelial hyperplasia (benign hypertrophy) is common in the aging prostate of dogs and man. In contrast, little evidence is available for abnormal epithelial cell growth in seminal vesicles of aging animals. Recently, enlarged seminal vesicles were reported in senescent mice, however, that enlargement resulted from increased storage of secretion in the lumen and occurred concomitant to epithelial hypoplasia in that species.The present study is concerned with electron microscopic observations of changes occurring in the pseudostratified epithelium of the seminal vescles of aging rats. Special attention is given to certain non-epithelial cells which have entered the epithelial layer.


1962 ◽  
Vol 40 (3) ◽  
pp. 441-450 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. E. Arosenius ◽  
G. Nylander

ABSTRACT The capillary pattern of the thyroid gland was studied in the rat: one group had undergone hemithyroidectomy, one was treated with propyl thiouracil, and one subjected to both these experimental measures. Histological and microangiographic observations were compared with those in an intact control group. Epithelial hyperplasia and other morphological signs of activity were seen to a moderate extent in the hemithyroidectomized group, were marked in the rats treated with thiouracil, and most marked in the group subjected to both thiouracil medication and hemithyroidectomy. The appearances of the interfollicular capillaries showed no perceptible changes in the group subjected solely to hemithyroidectomy. Changes of the interfollicular capillaries were marked in all the animals treated with propyl thiouracil. In the group only treated with propyl thiouracil, the capillaries were dilated to sinusoid-like blood pools in limited segments between which the capillaries were of normal width. In the group subjected to both hemithyroidectomy and propyl thiouracil treatment the interfollicular capillaries were dilated throughout their course. The significance of these morphological and microangiographic observations is discussed.


2011 ◽  
Vol 300 (2) ◽  
pp. L242-L254 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephan A. Carey ◽  
Carol A. Ballinger ◽  
Charles G. Plopper ◽  
Ruth J. McDonald ◽  
Alfred A. Bartolucci ◽  
...  

Children chronically exposed to high levels of ozone (O3), the principal oxidant pollutant in photochemical smog, are more vulnerable to respiratory illness and infections. The specific factors underlying this differential susceptibility are unknown but may be related to air pollutant-induced nasal alterations during postnatal development that impair the normal physiological functions (e.g., filtration and mucociliary clearance) serving to protect the more distal airways from inhaled xenobiotics. In adult animal models, chronic ozone exposure is associated with adaptations leading to a decrease in airway injury. The purpose of our study was to determine whether cyclic ozone exposure induces persistent morphological and biochemical effects on the developing nasal airways of infant monkeys early in life. Infant (180-day-old) rhesus macaques were exposed to 5 consecutive days of O3 [0.5 parts per million (ppm), 8 h/day; “1-cycle”] or filtered air (FA) or 11 biweekly cycles of O3 (FA days 1– 9; 0.5 ppm, 8 h/day on days 10– 14; “11-cycle”). The left nasal passage was processed for light microscopy and morphometric analysis. Mucosal samples from the right nasal passage were processed for GSH, GSSG, ascorbate (AH2), and uric acid (UA) concentration. Eleven-cycle O3 induced persistent rhinitis, squamous metaplasia, and epithelial hyperplasia in the anterior nasal airways of infant monkeys, resulting in a 39% increase in the numeric density of epithelial cells. Eleven-cycle O3 also induced a 65% increase in GSH concentrations at this site. The persistence of epithelial hyperplasia was positively correlated with changes in GSH. These results indicate that early life ozone exposure causes persistent nasal epithelial alterations in infant monkeys and provide a potential mechanism for the increased susceptibility to respiratory illness exhibited by children in polluted environments.


1994 ◽  
Vol 31 (3) ◽  
pp. 366-374 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. A. Herbert ◽  
B. S. Stegelmeier ◽  
N. A. Gillett ◽  
A. H. Rebar ◽  
W. W. Carlton ◽  
...  

Immunohistochemistry and transmission electron microscopy were used to clarify the cellular origin for plutonium-239-induced pulmonary proliferative (preneoplastic) epithelial lesions and epithelial neoplasms in F344 rats. Examples of each histologic type of proliferative lesion and neoplasm were stained by the avidin-biotin complex immunoperoxidase method using antibodies to rat surfactant apoprotein and Clara cell antigen. Rat surfactant apoprotein immunostaining was detected in type II pneumocytes in sections of normal lung, in the cells of the proliferative lesions classified histologically as alveolar epithelial hyperplasia (51) and mixed foci (alveolar epithelial hyperplasia with fibrosis) (30), and in adenomas (2), adenocarcinomas (3), and adenosquamous carcinomas (2). With the exception of one adenosquamous carcinoma, Clara cell antigen immunostaining was not detected in any of the pulmonary lesions but was detected in nonciliated cuboidal epithelial (Clara) cells in normal bronchioles. The epithelial cells of the proliferative lesions and neoplasms had ultrastructural features consistent with type II pneumocytes, i.e., the presence of cytoplasmic lamellar and multivesicular bodies. The results of these studies indicate that the majority of plutonium-induced proliferative epithelial lesions and neoplasms in the rat originate from alveolar type II pneumocytes.


1968 ◽  
Vol 26 (5) ◽  
pp. 619-622 ◽  
Author(s):  
Howard Phillips ◽  
Arthur Williams

1989 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 6-14
Author(s):  
S J Compere ◽  
P A Baldacci ◽  
A H Sharpe ◽  
R Jaenisch

Infection of mouse embryos at 8 days of gestation with a replication-defective retrovirus carrying the human c-Ha-ras-1 oncogene led to efficient and rapid induction of hyperplastic lesions. Twenty-four percent of viable off-spring developed abnormal growths after infection with purified virus. The lesions contained a single integrated provirus and produced viral RNA and the Ha-ras oncogene product (p21). The latency period between the time of infection and appearance of the lesions suggested that secondary alterations in addition to activated ras were necessary for neoplasms to develop. The earliest and most abundant growths were cutaneous and appeared from 4 to 36 weeks of age, with a median of 4 weeks of age. A number of subcutaneous lesions also developed over the same time span but at a median of 18 weeks of age. The rapid development of cutaneous lesions in response to transduction of the ras oncogene contrasts with other studies in which adult skin required secondary treatment with promoters prior to ras induction of epithelial hyperplasia. These results demonstrate that infection of midgestation mouse embryos allows rapid analysis of oncogene potency in skin.


2018 ◽  
Vol 190 (50) ◽  
pp. E1481-E1481 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander Kreuter ◽  
Steffi Silling

Author(s):  
A Sanchez-Torres ◽  
I Mota ◽  
J Alberdi-Navarro ◽  
I Cercadillo-Ibarguren ◽  
R Figueiredo ◽  
...  

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