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  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-2307
    Keywords: Primary biliary cirrhosis ; Ultrastructure of bile duct ; Bile flow disturbance ; Intrahepatic biliary tree
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Using wedge liver biopsies from patients with primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC), ultrastructural features of the intrahepatic bile ducts in livers with slight or no bile duct loss were compared with those in livers with advanced bile duct loss and in extrahepatic cholestasis (EHC). Most changes in the biliary epithelium in PBC were similar to those in EHC. Microvillous loss and bleb formation, mitochondrial damage and increase in endoplasmic reticulum and ribosomes were found in PBC irrespective of the degree of bile duct loss, and also in EHC. These changes were present almost equally at any level of the biliary tree, and are presumed to represent a variety of non-specific lesions of biliary epithelial cells. As the loss of bile ducts in PBC progressed, cytoskeletal filaments and cytophagosomes increased in number and basement membranes were more thickened and reduplicated. These changes were more or less conspicuous in smaller branches of the biliary tree, and were also prominent in EHC. They might be causally related to the bile flow disturbance in the liver. Lateral intercellular spaces were irregularly dilated and contained osmiophilic membranous and/or granular material, similar to that found in duct lumena, within and without the basement membrane, and in the cytoplasm of periductal macrophages. Furthermore, pinocytotic vesicles were increased in the biliary cytoplasm facing periphery. These findings suggest possible alteration of the permeability of biliary epithelial cells, probably in the direction from the lumena to the periductal tissue. Such changes were found in PBC livers with virtual absence of bile duct loss, and the significance of this phenomenon is discussed.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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