Saeger W. [Comparative light and electron microscopic studies of oncocytic pituitary adenomas (author's transl)].
VIRCHOWS ARCHIV. A, PATHOLOGICAL ANATOMY AND HISTOLOGY 1975;
369:29-44. [PMID:
175558 DOI:
10.1007/bf00432459]
[Citation(s) in RCA: 13] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/13/2022]
Abstract
In a collection of 108 surgically removed, light and electron microscopically studied pituitary tumors, 19 adenomas (17.6%) could be found of which oncocytic tumor cells constituted more than 50%. These showed histologically, in conformity with the criteria of oncocytes, a fairly broad cytoplasm with finely granular or, in part, finely vacuolar structures and distinct cell membranes. The nuclei were predominantly round and moderately rich in chromatin but also in part, pyknotic. In paraffin-embedded sections the tumors could not be distinguished with certainty from chromophobe or moderately granulated acidophil adenomas. In plastic-embedded sections they could be identified by the typical filmy and finely granular feature of the cytoplasm which was distinctly different from conglomerations of secretory granules. Ultrastructurally they were characterized by many densely packed mitochondria. These were, in part, hydropically swollen. Furthermore, 5 tumors exhibited increased hormone-synthesizing organelles, 2 of which induced an acromegaly. Probably the oncocytic pituitary adenomas are secondarily transformed chromophobe or moderately chromophil tumors which must be regarded as independent, for the most part endocrinologically inactive pituitary tumors. In addition to these purely or almost purely oncocytic tumors further 12 adenomas (11.1%) with oncocytic parts constituting between 10 and 50% of the tissue were in our collection. Of these, 5 were moderately or distinctly acidophil adenomas with clinical symptoms of acromegaly; 2 were, for the most part, mucoid cell adenomas with Nelson's syndrome.
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