Liver glycogen bodies: ground-glass hepatocytes in transplanted patients
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作者:
Pablo A. Bejarano
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机构:University of Miami School of Medicine,Department of Pathology
Pablo A. Bejarano
Monica T. Garcia
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机构:University of Miami School of Medicine,Department of Pathology
Monica T. Garcia
Maria M. Rodriguez
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机构:University of Miami School of Medicine,Department of Pathology
Maria M. Rodriguez
Phillip Ruiz
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机构:University of Miami School of Medicine,Department of Pathology
Phillip Ruiz
Andreas G. Tzakis
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机构:University of Miami School of Medicine,Department of Pathology
Andreas G. Tzakis
机构:
[1] University of Miami School of Medicine,Department of Pathology
[2] Jackson Memorial Hospital,Department of Surgery
[3] University of Miami School of Medicine,undefined
来源:
Virchows Archiv
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2006年
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449卷
关键词:
Inclusions;
Glycogen;
Ground-glass hepatocytes;
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暂无
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摘要:
Ground-glass hepatocytes have been described in Lafora’s disease, fibrinogen deposition, hepatitis B, type IV glycogenosis, and alcohol aversion (cyanamide) therapy. We encountered ground-glass hepatocytes with intracytoplasmic inclusions in four liver biopsies from three transplanted patients who had none of the above-mentioned underlying diseases. One patient was a 4-year-old boy who had a kidney transplant for severe ureterovesical reflux. Patient 2 was a 52-year-old man who had two liver transplants because of hepatitis C. The third patient was a 7-month-old girl who underwent a multivisceral transplant because of necrotizing enterocolitis and liver failure induced by total parenteral nutrition. The patients developed liver abnormalities from 45 days to 4 years after their transplants. The livers showed conspicuous ground-glass hepatocytes in 90% of the children’s samples and 30% of the adult liver cells. The cytoplasmic bodies stained strongly for Gomori methenamine-silver; they were positive for periodic acid-Schiff without diastase, but negative after diastase digestion. They were negative for colloidal iron and hepatitis B core and surface antigens. Electron microscopy revealed non-membrane bound aggregates of glycogen. Idiopathic ground-glass hepatocytes occur in transplanted patients and represent accumulation of altered glycogen. However, their clinical significance and cause are not entirely elucidated.