In five rats with congenital portacaval shunt, liver atrophy, hyperplastic foci in the periportal zone, atrophic hepatocytes in the centrolobular zone, well-preserved hepatocyte ultrastructure with abundant rough endoplasmic reticulum, packed mitochondria and numerous peroxisomes were h r v e d as i
Quantitative studies of testicular atrophy following portacaval shunt in rats
β Scribed by Abd M. Zaitoun; Gustav Apelqvist; Cecilia Wikell; Hanan Al-mardini; Finn Bengtsson; Christopher O. Record
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 791 KB
- Volume
- 28
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0270-9139
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β¦ Synopsis
To evaluate the differential effects of portacaval shunting (PCS) on the morphological changes that occur in humans with portal-systemic encephalopathy, male rats underwent either PCS (13) or sham operations (10). Normal adult rats (6) were used as controls. All animals were killed 5 to 7 weeks after the surgery. The wet weight of the testes was obtained. Hematoxylin-eosin (HE)-stained sections at 5-m thickness were used for stereological analysis using an image analysis system. Apoptosis was assessed quantitatively in HE and in in situ end-labeling (ISEL)-stained slides, while mitotic activity and mast cell numbers were assessed in 20 high-power fields. There was a significant reduction in the testicular mass (664 mg) in PCS rats in comparison with sham (2,199 mg) and control (1,937 mg) rats (P F .00001). The thickness of germinal epithelium was significantly reduced in PCS rats (64 m) compared with sham (126 m) and control groups (108 m). The number of tubules per square millimeter and the mean curvature were significantly increased in PCS rats (P F .00001). There was a 112-fold increase in apoptosis in PCS rats (112) in comparison with the control and shamoperation groups (1.2 and 0.7, respectively). Mitosis was significantly reduced in the PCS group (P β«Ψβ¬ .0089), but mast cells were unchanged. The results suggest that PCS in the absence of liver dysfunction produces testicular atrophy by reduction in mitosis, maturation arrest, and increased apoptosis of the germinal epithelium. PCS may therefore be responsible for gonadal atrophy that occurs with advanced liver disease in humans.
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