Volume 15, Issue 10 pp. e592-e598
Original Article

Interstitial cells of Cajal: crucial for the development of megacolon in human Chagas' disease?

S. Jabari

Corresponding Author

S. Jabari

Institute of Anatomy I, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Erlangen, Germany

Correspondence to: Samir Jabari, Institute of Anatomy I, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Krankenhausstr. 9, Erlangen D-91054, Germany.

E-mail: [email protected]

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A. B. M. da Silveira

A. B. M. da Silveira

Human Anatomy Sector, ICBIM, Universidade Federal de Uberlândia, Minas Gerais, Brazil

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E. C. de Oliveira

E. C. de Oliveira

Department of Surgery, Medical School, Universidade Federal de Goiás, Goiás, Brazil

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K. Quint

K. Quint

Institute of Pathology, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Erlangen, Germany

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A. Wirries

A. Wirries

Department of Trauma, Hand and Reconstructive Surgery, University of Marburg, Marburg, Germany

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W. Neuhuber

W. Neuhuber

Institute of Anatomy I, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Erlangen, Germany

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A. Brehmer

A. Brehmer

Institute of Anatomy I, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Erlangen, Germany

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First published: 01 July 2013
Citations: 12

Abstract

Aim

Megacolon, chronic dilation of a colonic segment,is accompanied by extensive myenteric neuron loss. However, this fails to explain unequivocally the formation of megacolon. We aimed to study further enteric structures that are directly or indirectly involved in colonic motility.

Method

From surgically removed megacolon segments of seven Chagasic patients, three sets of cryosections from oral, megacolonic and anal zones were immunohistochemically quadruple-stained for smooth-muscle actin (SMA), synaptophysin (SYN, for nerve fibres), S100 (glia) and c-Kit (interstitial cells of Cajal, ICCs). Values of area measurements were related to the appropriate muscle layer areas and these proportions were compared with those of seven non-Chagasic control patients.

Results

Whereas nerve and glia profile proportions did not mirror unequivocally the changes of Chagasic colon calibre (nondilation/dilation/nondilation), the proportions of SMA (i.e. muscle tissue density) and c-Kit (i.e. ICC density) did so: they decreased from the oral to the megacolonic segment but increased to the anal zones (muscle tissue density: control 68.3%, oral 54.3%, mega 42.1%, anal 47.6%; ICC-density: control 1.8%, oral 1.1%, mega 0.4, anal 0.8%).

Conclusion

Of the parameters evaluated, muscle tissue and ICC densities may be involved in the formation of Chagasic megacolon, although the mechanism of destruction cannot be deduced.

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