Ultrastructural basis of the vasculopathy in and around brain tuberculomas. Possible significance of altered basement membrane

The fine structure of small blood vessels in and around ten brain tuberculomas was examined. In the peripheral reactive zone of the tuberculomas, examination of 1-mu-thick survey sections established the chronic inflammatory process and the vasculitis characterized by infiltration of the vasomurium...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inThe American journal of pathology Vol. 89; no. 1; pp. 35 - 50
Main Authors Dastur, D K, Dave, U P
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 01.10.1977
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Summary:The fine structure of small blood vessels in and around ten brain tuberculomas was examined. In the peripheral reactive zone of the tuberculomas, examination of 1-mu-thick survey sections established the chronic inflammatory process and the vasculitis characterized by infiltration of the vasomurium (vessel wall) by large and small mononuclear cells. This reaction was typical of chronic epithelioid cell granuloma. Electron microscopic examination of the reactive zone confirmed the vascular proliferation and vasculitis, the venule being the most frequently involved type of blood vessel. It showed the infiltrating cells to lie amidst osmiophilic, concentrically proliferated basement membrane laminae, which formed the greater part of the thickened vessel wall, generally surrounding the endothelial cells directly, the pericytes having disappeared. This appearance, together with the results of Gomori's reticulin stain on paraffin sections, suggested that the altered basement membrane material was reticulin. The possibility is discussed that the altered basement membrane material could be antigenic and that it might be responsible for perpetuating the necrotic vascular and perivascular reaction in tuberculous meningitis and tuberculomas. The above change in the basement membrane was not encountered in the blood vessels of the surrounding edematous brain. The endothelial cells and tight junctions were relatively well-preserved. Intact arterioles could be recognized even in severely edematous brain tissue. At both sites the fine structure of the blood vessels was typical of that expected in the central nervous system. Fenestrated vessels were not seen. The perivascular astrocytic end-feet were destroyed in the reactive zone and either distended or ruptured in the overtly edematous brain tissue also. In the central caseous part of the tuberculoma, there were few blood vessels, and they were in a state of advanced necrosis, but ghost outlines of proliferated basement membrane could be seen.
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ISSN:0002-9440
1525-2191