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Thyroglobulin synthesis of oxyphilic cells in various types of neoplastic and autoimmune thyroid diseases.

To determine the content of thyroglobulin in oxyphilic cells of the thyroid, which have been considered as non-thyroglobulin producing cells, the degree of stainability of the various oxyphilic cells for thyroglobulin was compared with that of non-oxyphilic follicular cells in either same or differe...

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Autores principales: Hwang, T. S., Suh, J. S., Kim, Y. I., Park, S. H., Cho, B. Y., Koh, C. S.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Korean Academy of Medical Sciences 1990
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3053723/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1698387
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author Hwang, T. S.
Suh, J. S.
Kim, Y. I.
Park, S. H.
Cho, B. Y.
Koh, C. S.
author_facet Hwang, T. S.
Suh, J. S.
Kim, Y. I.
Park, S. H.
Cho, B. Y.
Koh, C. S.
author_sort Hwang, T. S.
collection PubMed
description To determine the content of thyroglobulin in oxyphilic cells of the thyroid, which have been considered as non-thyroglobulin producing cells, the degree of stainability of the various oxyphilic cells for thyroglobulin was compared with that of non-oxyphilic follicular cells in either same or different lesion. A total of 13 oxyphilic lesions, including three follicular adenomas containing oxyphilic cell nodules, four pure oxyphilic cell adenomas, and six Hashimoto's thyroiditis were compared with 16 of non-oxyphilic lesions such as, seven follicular adenomas, four chronic lymphocytic thyroiditis, and five Graves' disease. Many oxyphilic cells stained positively for thyroglobulin regardless of their morphologic variation, but less intensely than the usual follicular cells in follicular adenomas, chronic lymphocytic thyroiditis, and Graves' disease. The stainability of oxyphilic cells for thyroglogulin did not show any significant correlation with morphologic features, whereas in follicular adenomas, the non-oxyphilic follicular cells forming microfollicles stained less strongly for thyroglobulin than the same cells lining large mature follicles in a reproducible way. With above findings, we concluded that oxyphilic cells maintain the functional activity in terms of thyroglobulin synthesis, although the content of the thyroglobulin is less than that of non-oxyphilic colloid forming follicular cells.
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spelling pubmed-30537232011-03-16 Thyroglobulin synthesis of oxyphilic cells in various types of neoplastic and autoimmune thyroid diseases. Hwang, T. S. Suh, J. S. Kim, Y. I. Park, S. H. Cho, B. Y. Koh, C. S. J Korean Med Sci Research Article To determine the content of thyroglobulin in oxyphilic cells of the thyroid, which have been considered as non-thyroglobulin producing cells, the degree of stainability of the various oxyphilic cells for thyroglobulin was compared with that of non-oxyphilic follicular cells in either same or different lesion. A total of 13 oxyphilic lesions, including three follicular adenomas containing oxyphilic cell nodules, four pure oxyphilic cell adenomas, and six Hashimoto's thyroiditis were compared with 16 of non-oxyphilic lesions such as, seven follicular adenomas, four chronic lymphocytic thyroiditis, and five Graves' disease. Many oxyphilic cells stained positively for thyroglobulin regardless of their morphologic variation, but less intensely than the usual follicular cells in follicular adenomas, chronic lymphocytic thyroiditis, and Graves' disease. The stainability of oxyphilic cells for thyroglogulin did not show any significant correlation with morphologic features, whereas in follicular adenomas, the non-oxyphilic follicular cells forming microfollicles stained less strongly for thyroglobulin than the same cells lining large mature follicles in a reproducible way. With above findings, we concluded that oxyphilic cells maintain the functional activity in terms of thyroglobulin synthesis, although the content of the thyroglobulin is less than that of non-oxyphilic colloid forming follicular cells. Korean Academy of Medical Sciences 1990-03 /pmc/articles/PMC3053723/ /pubmed/1698387 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Hwang, T. S.
Suh, J. S.
Kim, Y. I.
Park, S. H.
Cho, B. Y.
Koh, C. S.
Thyroglobulin synthesis of oxyphilic cells in various types of neoplastic and autoimmune thyroid diseases.
title Thyroglobulin synthesis of oxyphilic cells in various types of neoplastic and autoimmune thyroid diseases.
title_full Thyroglobulin synthesis of oxyphilic cells in various types of neoplastic and autoimmune thyroid diseases.
title_fullStr Thyroglobulin synthesis of oxyphilic cells in various types of neoplastic and autoimmune thyroid diseases.
title_full_unstemmed Thyroglobulin synthesis of oxyphilic cells in various types of neoplastic and autoimmune thyroid diseases.
title_short Thyroglobulin synthesis of oxyphilic cells in various types of neoplastic and autoimmune thyroid diseases.
title_sort thyroglobulin synthesis of oxyphilic cells in various types of neoplastic and autoimmune thyroid diseases.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3053723/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1698387
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