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Corpora amylacea in mesothelioma of the atrioventricular node

โœ Scribed by Raffaele David; Yehuda Hiss


Book ID
104505023
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1978
Tongue
English
Weight
962 KB
Volume
124
Category
Article
ISSN
0022-3417

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โœฆ Synopsis


Rounded or polyhedral, acellular, dense lamellated structures were seen within gland-like spaces in a case of atrioventricular mesothelioma. These structures exhibited many of the histochemical characteristics of amyloid, viz., pink colour with green birefringence and bright red fluorescence with alkaline Congo red; ortochromasia and red birefringence with standardised toluidine blue; positive DMAB-nitrite and diazotisation coupling reactions and spontaneous autofluorescence. It is suggested that these bodies are derived from spontaneous assembly or polymerisation of microfibrils of desquamated cells lining the cystic spaces of the tumour as occurs in prostatic corpora amylacea. The peculiar intramyofibre proliferation of tumour cells in the peripheral part of the tumour suggests that viable tumour cells can penetrate, survive and proliferate within atrial or nodal myofibres leaving an intact sarcolemmal sheath. The slow tumour cell growth and the successive degeneration of central tumour cells may explain the tubular and/or glandular pattern constantly seen in this tumour.


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Corpora amylacea (CA) are glycoproteinaceous inclusions that accumulate in astroglia and other brain cells as a function of advancing age and, to an even greater extent, in several human neurodegenerative conditions. The mechanisms responsible for their biogenesis and their subcellular origin(s) rem