1. Hyaline Globules (Thanatosomes) in Gastrointestinal Epithelium: Pathophysiologic Correlations.
- Author
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Dorian Dikov, Marie Auriault, Jean Boivin, Victoria Sarafian, and John Papadimitriou
- Subjects
EPITHELIUM ,GASTROINTESTINAL diseases ,ISCHEMIA ,APOPTOSIS ,CELL death - Abstract
Hyaline globules (HGs; thanatosomes) are well-defined morphologic and functional entities representing a degenerative phenomenon common to all cell types. We present the first quantitative and qualitative study of HGs in normal and pathologic gastrointestinal (GI) epithelium from a series of 2,230 biopsies. HGs were very rarely found in normal epithelium (1.1%), but their number increased significantly in specimens with ischemic injury (47%) and benign regenerative proliferation (70%). Their incidence in adenomatous polyps and adenocarcinomas was about 11% to 27%. Of the HGs, 2.9% contained nuclear fragments. Our results entirely support the unifying morphogenetic concept for HGs. The role of 2 obligatory morphogenetic factors for the generation of thanatosomes (propensity to apoptosis and heterophagy/autophagy) is confirmed. The nature of the third factor, ischemic conditions, is specified. Although a nonspecific microscopic phenomenon, HGs in the GI tract represented a relatively constant and useful histologic marker of enhanced cell turnover and ischemic injury. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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