Iron and copper deposition in chronic active hepatitis and liver cirrhosis; pathogenetic role in progressive liver cell damage.
Iron and copper deposition were examined in patients with chronic active viral hepatitis (CAH) and posthepatitic liver cirrhosis (LC) by Berlin blue, rhodanine, or Victoria blue staining and X-ray microanalysis. Considerable iron or copper deposition was demonstrated in the peripheral zones of hepatic lobules in both CAH (53% of specimens) and LC (63% of specimens). Frozen sections taken from the 2 CAH surgical sections with iron depositions were examined by photoncounting image analysis, and superoxide liberation from the metal granules were demonstrated. In areas of metal deposition, vacuolation of liver cell nuclei, accumulation of lipofuscin, and induction of metallothionein (69% of rhodanine- or Victoria blue-positive specimens) were often demonstrated, whereas induction of ferritin was found only in 14% of Berlin blue-positive specimens. The PCNA index was significantly lower in areas of metal deposition than in the adjacent areas without metal deposition, indicating lowered proliferative capability in the former. These results indicate that cell-mediated immune mechanisms causing the disturbance of bile secretion and heavy metal deposition in the peripheral zones of hepatic lobules may be involved in the progression of viral hepatitis from its acute phase to CAH and finally to LC phase, resulting in piecemeal necrosis. However, cholangitis could not be demonstrated in the present study.[1]References
- Iron and copper deposition in chronic active hepatitis and liver cirrhosis; pathogenetic role in progressive liver cell damage. Ishida, M., Nakagawara, G., Imamura, Y., Fukuda, M. European journal of histochemistry : EJH. (1995) [Pubmed]
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