Активность

 
  • pondmap3: новый статус 1 days, 12 hours назад

    This paper describes the spontaneous ovarian choriocarcinoma observed in a young female CrlCD1 (ICR) mouse. The mouse was sacrificed at 8 weeks of age after oral administration of a compound for 2 weeks. The left ovary was found to be cystically enlarged with dark red hemorrhaging. The cystic mass contained abundant blood plasma and erythrocytes. At the peripheral regions of the mass, large pleomorphic tumor cells with bizarre shaped nuclei were detected. Tumor cells contained a single large nucleus and abundant eosinophilic to amphophilic cytoplasm. Histopathology of the tumor cells resembled that of trophoblastic giant cells. Therefore, the observed ovarian lesion was diagnosed as a choriocarcinoma. No microscopic lesions were observed in the right ovary or other reproductive organs. Ovarian choriocarcinoma was considered to be of non-gestational origin. This is the first report of ovarian choriocarcinoma in a young ICR mouse.In rats, chondrosarcomas have been reported to occur both spontaneously and secondary to chemical induction. In a rare case, a spontaneous chondrosarcoma was identified in the deformed femur of a young male Wistar rat. After gross examination of the femur and knee joint, tissue was collected and preserved. The formalin-fixed tissue was decalcified, embedded in paraffin, sectioned, and stained with hematoxylin and eosin. Microscopic examinations revealed a large, highly proliferative, noncapsulated growth of chondrocytic or chondroblastic origin in the femoral bone, with proliferating chondrocytes invading the bone and surrounding tissues in an infiltrative growth pattern. Based on its histomorphological features, the lesion was diagnosed as a malignant cartilaginous neoplasm of spontaneous origin.An intestinal mass was found in the border area of the jejunum and ileum of a 110-week-old male F344 rat. Histopathologically, the mass protruded into the lumen and was covered with intestinal epithelium, exhibiting a normal architecture. The lesion was located in the submucosa and consisted of loose connective tissue, smooth muscle, scattered ganglion cells, and blood vessels of various sizes. Although these components showed an irregular and disordered structure, no cellular atypia, increased proliferation activity, or invasive growth to adjacent tissues were detected. Immunohistochemical analyses revealed that smooth muscle, ganglion, and endothelial cells were positive for α-smooth muscle actin and vimentin, S-100, and CD34 and von Willebrand factor, respectively, indicating maturation of these cells. Thus, the mass was diagnosed as a neuromuscular and vascular hamartoma of the small intestine. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of this type of lesion in rodents.Swim bladder tumors were detected in three out of 28 wavy medakas aged about 2 years old, all of which displayed abnormal swimming patterns caused by their spinal curvature. The tumors were located in the dorsal abdominal cavity. The swim bladder lumen was not detected in the region where it was originally assumed to be located, and that region was replaced with adipose tissue. The tumors were non-invasive, expansile, and encapsulated solid masses composed of a homogenous population of well-differentiated, densely packed, gas glandular epithelium-like cells. The tumor masses were connected to the rete mirabile, but the tumor cells did not infiltrate into them. Histopathologically, these tumors were diagnosed as adenomas originating from the gas glandular epithelium of the swim bladder. Spontaneous swim bladder tumors are rare in medaka, with an incidence of 0.02%; however, in the present study of wavy medaka, the incidence was much higher (10.7%). The long-term physical effects on the gas gland caused by swim bladder deformation considered to be a secondary effect of the spinal curvature may be an important factor in the proliferation of the gas glandular epithelium in the wavy medaka, resulting in the higher incidence of swim bladder tumors.Interdigitating dendritic cell (IDC) hyperplasia is considered a benign spontaneous condition occasionally observed in the lymph nodes of mice. It has been rarely reported and, to the best of our knowledge, it has never been characterized using immunohistochemistry. The present work describes a spontaneous IDC hyperplasia case in a lymph node of a 16-week-old control female C57BL/6 mouse. Microscopically, the lymph node architecture was completely effaced by the proliferation of eosinophilic spindle cells with an abundant pale cytoplasm forming trabecule admixed lymphocyte infiltrates. The spindle cell population was positive for F4/80, partially positive for S100 calcium-binding protein A4 (S100A4), slightly positive for E-cadherin, and negative for α-Smooth muscle actin (SMA) and cytokeratin. Lymphocytes were positive for CD3, CD4, CD20 and negative for CD8. Spindle cells were considered to be originated from the myeloid lineage, based on the immunohistochemistry (IHC) results, but their precise origin remains unclear (IDC or macrophages); even if macrophage origin is most likely based on F4/80 positivity, this remains to be further clarified using other markers.Glioblastoma (GBM) is a highly aggressive central nervous system cancer. Its extracranial metastases have rarely been reported in the past few decades. Moreover, the pathogenesis of extracranial GBM metastases remains unclear. Here, we report a case of pulmonary metastasis in a male Wistar rat of C6 GBM model. selleck This reported Wistar male rat was one of the experimental control group without any other intervention except for C6 GBM cells orthotopic implantation. On postoperative day 15, the animal which was reported in this study showed highly cellular, pleomorphic, tumor with nuclear atypia in the brain (Ki67, approximately 65.7%) and lungs (Ki67, 49.5%). Tumor cells in the lung showed immunoreactivity for glial fibrillary acidic protein. Inflammatory CD68+ cell infiltration, weakly positive E-cadherin, and strongly positive staining for vimentin were observed both in tumors in the brain and lungs. Based on further morphological analysis, we speculate that the potential metastatic route into the lung might be hematogenous metastasis.