Clin Invest Med
April 1997
Objective: To assess the relationship of asymptomatic carriage of Candida albicans and clinically apparent thrush in patients with HIV infection.
Design: Prospective, longitudinal, controlled study.
Setting: The HIV clinic at St.
The study of the molecular biology of head and neck squamous cell carcinomas has been heavily reliant on the analysis of cell lines. This is largely because the maintenance of primary cell cultures is difficult. However, being monoclonal, cell lines are not representative of the primary tumor because of the loss of tumor cell heterogeneity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOral Surg Oral Med Oral Pathol Oral Radiol Endod
December 1996
Despite limited supporting evidence, salivary gland myoepithelial cells are said to be differentiated cells with little or no capacity to replicate; they presumably develop from stem cells. This study investigated the proliferative potential of myoepithelial cells with an antibody to proliferating cell nuclear antigen and a rat model. This model involved clamping of the parotid duct causing atrophy of the gland and then releasing the duct followed by gland regeneration.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHistogenetic concepts for salivary gland tumors are predicated on the presence of reserve or undifferentiated cells in normal glands, presumably the source for cell renewal and induction of tumors. Developing rat parotid gland, which remains fetal-like at birth, provides the opportunity to study differentiation and observe whether cytologically undifferentiated cells do or do not have functional indicators of specific differentiation pathways. Immunohistochemistry and immuno-electron microscopy, when applied to parotid gland at birth, at 12 days of age and in the adult gland, indicate that commitment to myoepithelial cell differentiation occurs prior to development of structural changes characteristic of these cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTheoretical reserve cells located in the intercalated and excretory ducts are postulated to be responsible for salivary gland tumourigenesis, with acinar cells playing no role in this process. Animal models, one using low-dose radiation to rat submandibular glands, indicate that this hypothesis is incorrect. Few human models have been devised to demonstrate and verify this theory.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOral Surg Oral Med Oral Pathol Oral Radiol Endod
March 1995
Objective: Markers for normal salivary gland myoepithelium were used to determine the extent of their expression in the neoplastic myoepithelial (nonluminal) cells of pleomorphic adenomas and then in the tumor cells in myoepitheliomas and to gather information necessary to establish diagnostic criteria, especially muscle actin expression, for myoepitheliomas.
Study Design: Methanol/acetic acid-fixed and paraffin-embedded tissue was used to immunohistochemically study expression of intermediate and smooth-muscle actin filaments in nonluminal cells in 14 pleomorphic adenomas and to compare this to their expression in five myoepitheliomas.
Results: In routine histologic sections, the morphologic variants of nonluminal tumor cells--spindle, stellate, polygonal, angular, and plasmacytoid--in pleomorphic adenoma mirror the spectrum of tumor cells in myoepitheliomas.
Elucidating the cellular characteristics of the nonluminal or myoepithelial cells of pleomorphic adenomas is one approach to establishing the diagnostic criteria for myoepitheliomas. Ultrastructural features of nonluminal tumor cells in 22 pleomorphic adenomas and of tumor cells in 9 myoepitheliomas were assessed from micrographs of routinely fixed and epoxy resin-embedded samples. Recognizable myofilaments were only moderately prominent in 1 myoepithelioma.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFImmunohistochemical detection of proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA), a cell cycle-related protein used to estimate tumor growth fraction, is variable in formalin-fixed compared with methanol-fixed tissue specimens. This is assumed to result from conformational changes in the antigenic epitope induced by formaldehyde; therefore, to be susceptible to retrieval in archival specimens. In this study, formalin fixation reduced the intensity of staining and the number of positive cells to approximately 25% of those in methanol-fixed material.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe presence of three functionally and phenotypically distinct epithelial cell populations--acinar, duct, and myoepithelial cells--in major salivary glands creates problems when developing physiologically appropriate culture systems for the study of these tissues in vitro. Previous attempts to establish cultures of rat submandibular gland resulted in continued proliferation and maintenance of glandular architecture, but loss of distinct features of differentiation of the three epithelial cell types. The present study describes an ultrathin free-floating collagen gel culture technique (mantle gels).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObstructive adenitis of major salivary glands is a common entity. Although the pathologic features are well recognized, the various cell types involved in the atrophy and subsequent regeneration of the obstructed salivary gland have been controversial. For this reason, an animal model of obstructive sialadenitis that induced atrophy in the rat parotid gland was developed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicrosc Res Tech
January 1994
Electron microscopy has a limited role in the diagnosis of primary salivary gland tumors, although it can be helpful in metastatic lesions of possible salivary gland origin. The diversity of subtypes in salivary gland tumors, as well as the range of histomorphology within any one subtype, is unparalleled in any other human tumor. This and their relative infrequency causes diagnostic problems for pathologists.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOral Surg Oral Med Oral Pathol
January 1994
Application of ionizing radiation to adult rat major salivary glands tested tenets of the bicellular reserve cell hypothesis for the induction of salivary gland tumors, namely, that stem cells preferentially located to luminal cells of the intercalated duct and basal cells of the excretory duct in normal salivary glands. The effect of a single, low dose (3000 cGy) of x-radiation administered to the parotid and submandibular glands was followed with the use of immunocytochemistry and an antibody to the cell cycle-related protein proliferating cell nuclear antigen to detect the kinetics and localization of cycling cells up to 15 days postirradiation. Maximal responses occurred in acinar cells (12.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo study the proliferative capacity of salivary gland, an animal model of regeneration was developed. A clamp, which induced atrophy in parotid gland by obstructing the main excretory duct but allowed restoration of duct patency following removal, was implanted in a series of rats. When it was removed (Day 7), the weight of the glands was reduced by 50% and acinar cells had decreased from 93.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLocalization of cells with proliferative capacity in human major salivary glands lacks extensive study. Minced fragments of human parotid (n = 3) and submandibular (n = 3) glands embedded in a floating collagen gel matrix and cultured for up to 28 days allowed maintenance of the three-dimensional relationship of the various cell types in these glands. Immunocytochemistry and electron microscopy of a time-dependent series of cultured gland fragments showed gradual cytologic modification of acinar cells so that acini became duct-like but also established that even after 28 days of culture certain cellular features allowed continued identification of acinar cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOf 112 patients with peptic ulcer disease examined for oral carriage of Candida, 66 (59%) were carriers. Candida carriage was associated with blood group O (P < 0.05) and, independently, with nonsecretion of blood group antigens (P < 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCrit Rev Oral Biol Med
February 1994
Because of their complexity and relative infrequency, salivary gland tumors commonly result in diagnostic problems. Histogenetic and morphogenetic concepts of tumorigenesis in these glands are reviewed and their relevance to routine diagnosis and classification of salivary gland tumors evaluated. Evidence is presented from animal and human studies that under steady-state and pathophysiological conditions, all cell types present in the normal gland, including acinar cells, are capable of rapidly entering the cell cycle and are, therefore, possible targets for neoplastic transformation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMyoepithelial cells of salivary gland are uniquely specialized cells; their function is unclear, but the considerable complement of muscle-specific actin suggests contractility is one function. By routine transmission electron microscopy myofilament visualization is variable. Some myoepithelial cells appear to have limited and only focal aggregates of myofilaments, while others seem to have readily appreciated myofilaments within a longitudinally oriented cytoplasmic zone at the basal portion of the cell.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVirchows Arch A Pathol Anat Histopathol
September 1992
The degree and range of differentiation of the cells referred to as myoepithelial-like in pleomorphic adenomas and the tumour cells of myoepitheliomas are not definitely established. This type of information is critical for establishing reliable diagnostic criteria, such as expression of muscle-specific actin and ultrastructural identification of myofilaments, in these and other salivary gland tumours. Pleomorphic adenomas (18) and myoepitheliomas (5), of which 10 cases were fixed only in formalin and 13 cases where tissues were fixed in both formalin and methanol/acetic acid, were studied.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVirchows Arch A Pathol Anat Histopathol
September 1992
In the transgenic TG.SH (mouse mammary tumour virus/v-Ha-ras) mouse, designed to develop mammary tumours, occasional spontaneous salivary gland tumours have been reported, predominantly in males. The incidence and histomorphology of salivary gland tumours in 73 TG.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHistologic diversity is intrinsic to salivary gland tumors, but it is a particular feature of polymorphous low-grade adenocarcinoma as denoted by the terminology. Application of immunohistochemistry and electron microscopy to three examples allowed the study of some aspects of tumor cell differentiation in this minor salivary gland lesion. In one case where the tumor cells were cytologically of one type, immunohistochemistry clearly identified both luminal and nonluminal tumor cells, but the latter showed no evidence of myoepithelial cell differentiation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVirchows Arch A Pathol Anat Histopathol
June 1991
Fragments of rat submandibular gland (organoids) which maintained the topological organization of the parent tissue were cultured in a three-dimensional collagen gel matrix for up to 30 days. At 48 h, vigorous peripheral outgrowth had occurred around each organoid. This was accompanied by central necrosis and the bridging of adjacent organoids.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAccording to some current hypotheses, the morphology and organization of the intercalated duct/acinar interface of salivary gland have implications for the induction of tumors in this organ. However, this region has received limited detailed investigation. To study the organization of the terminal ductal segments of salivary gland, conventional transmission electron microscopy of human parotid and submandibular glands and canine submandibular gland was combined with 3-dimensional observations of polymer casts of the canine submandibular ductal system; the latter were prepared by retrograde injection of acrylic resin via the main excretory duct with subsequent digestion of the gland tissue.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVirchows Arch A Pathol Anat Histopathol
December 1990
Current classifications of salivary gland tumors separate mucoepidermoid carcinoma from other neoplasms on the basis of a number of histological features, in particular the lack of participation of neoplastic myoepithelial cells. However, ultrastructural examination of low- and intermediate-grade mucoepidermoid carcinomas and pleomorphic adenomas reveals many common organizational and cellular features. Of prime importance is the relationship of intermediate cells to the luminal cells in mucoepidermoid carcinomas, which is remarkably similar to that seen between modified myoepithelial cells and luminal cells in pleomorphic adenomas.
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