Histomorphology and Ultrastructure of Spontaneous Pulmonary Neoplasms in Strain A Mice
- 1 January 1991
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Experimental Lung Research
- Vol. 17 (2) , 131-155
- https://doi.org/10.3109/01902149109064407
Abstract
The microscopic and ultrastructural characteristics of spontaneous pulmonary neoplasms in strain A (strA) mice are described. Fifty-one spontaneous lung tumors were identified in 34 out of 57, 11–23-month-old male strA/Hen mice. Grossly, all tumors appeared as yellow-white, discrete nodules ranging in size from 1.0–10 mm. Tumor types were randomly distributed throughout the lung; however, the right lung lobes were most frequently involved. Histologically, tumors were classified as adenoma (34/51) or carcinoma (17/51) as defined by standard histopathologic criteria [1]. Adenomas were usually less than 4 mm in diameter and bad solid (16/34), papillary (10/34), or mixed (8/34) histologic growth patterns. Carcinomas were usually greater than 4 mm in diameter and had papillary (13/17) or mixed (4/17) histologic growth patterns. Ultrastructurally, benign tumors consisted of solid or papillary areas of neoplastic type II-like cells. Cells comprising malignant tumors had varying ultrastructural characteristics ranging from well-differentiated alveolar cell types to undifferentiated cells having intracytoplasmic osmiophilic dense bodies, vacuoles, or few specialized organelles commonly observed in mature nonneoplastic pulmonary epithelial cells.Keywords
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