Abnormal Distribution of Nerve Fibers in the Liver of Biliary Atresia
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DAIJI IWAMI1, RYOJI
OHI1, MASAKI
NIO1, SATORU
SHIMAOKA1, NOBUYUKI
SANO1 and HIROSHI
NAGURA2
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1Department of Pediatric Surgery and 2Department of Pathology,
Tohoku University School of Medicine, Sendai 980 - 77
We investigated changes in the pattern of hepatic innervation in liver specimens from 15
infants with biliary atresia and 4 age-matched controls by immunohistochemical methods. In
the control, nerve fibers identified by immunoreactivity for neural cell adhesion molecule
(NCAM) and S100 protein were present around the branches of hepatic arteries, portal veins
and bile ducts in the portal areas and the hepatic lobules. In biliary atresia, NCAM and S100
positive nerve fibers were increased in the vicinity of the hepatic arteries and the portal veins
in the enlarged portal areas, while no nerve fibers were observed around bile ducts and
periportal ductules which became NCAM positive. No innervation in the lobules was seen in
any cases regardless of the histological alteration. These findings may suggest that the
abnormal innervation in the liver with biliary atresia does not occur as a result of structural
changes in liver architecture caused by portal fibrosis and inflammation, but is associated
with immaturity or malformation of hepatic innervation in the patients.
Key word(s)---
biliary atresia; hepatic innervation; neural cell adhesion molecule
Tohoku J. Exp. Med., 1997, 181, 57-65
Address for reprints:
Ryoji Ohi, M.D., Department of Pediatric Surgery, Tohoku University School of Medicine,
1-1 Seiryomachi, Aoba-ku, Sendai 980-77, Japan.
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