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. 1999 Sep;297(3):451-7.
doi: 10.1007/s004410051371.

Correlation between gender and spontaneous C-cell tumors in the thyroid gland of the Wistar rat

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Correlation between gender and spontaneous C-cell tumors in the thyroid gland of the Wistar rat

I Martín-Lacave et al. Cell Tissue Res. 1999 Sep.

Abstract

In many rat strains, C-cell hyperplasia occurs in an age-dependent manner and is often associated with multifocal C-cell carcinoma. The purpose of this study was to investigate the spectrum of spontaneous, proliferative C-cell disorders by gender in Wistar rats throughout their lifespan. The incidence of C-cell hyperplasia shows a significant increase with age (P<0.001) and is much higher in female rats than in male rats (P<0.05). From 3 to 24 months of life, 27.5% of female rats showed a normal C-cell pattern, 55.0% showed C-cell hyperplasia, and 17.5% showed C-cell tumors; while 57.5% of male rats showed a normal C-cell pattern, 32.5% showed C-cell hyperplasia, and 10% showed C-cell tumors. Although the overall frequency of C-cell neoplasms in females was nearly double that in males, these data are not statistically significant. However, the number of C-cell tumors showed a significant increase with age (P<0.05). Therefore, we can conclude that there were significant differences in the incidence of the total spectrum of C-cell proliferative abnormalities in the thyroid gland of Wistar rats that were both age-dependent and gender-dependent.

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