The ciliated hepatic foregut cyst, an unusual bronchiolar foregut malformation: a histological, histochemical, and immunohistochemical study of 7 cases
- PMID: 10685641
- DOI: 10.1016/s0046-8177(00)80227-0
The ciliated hepatic foregut cyst, an unusual bronchiolar foregut malformation: a histological, histochemical, and immunohistochemical study of 7 cases
Abstract
The ciliated hepatic foregut cyst is an unusual solitary cystic lesion of the liver. In a series of 7 cases of hepatic ciliated cysts, we performed a histological, histochemical, and immunohistochemical study to better define the histogenesis of this rare entity. The patients were 4 women and 3 men, aged 39 to 75 years. Four patients presented with abdominal pain. In 3 cases the cyst was discovered incidentally on ultrasonography. The cysts measured from 1 to 4 cm in diameter. Microscopically, the lining of the columnar epithelium was composed of ciliated cells and mucin secreting goblet cells. The wall was composed of bands of smooth-muscle fibers surrounded by an outer fibrous capsule. The goblet cells stained with PAS, alcian blue, and high-iron diamine. The immunohistochemical study showed that endocrine cells were present within the cyst epithelium, positive for chromogranin, synaptophysin, bombesin, and calcitonin, and negative for serotonin, somatostatin, glucagon, insulin, gastrin, and pancreatic polypeptide. In all the cases, immunoreactivity of some cells for CC10 strongly suggested the presence of Clara cells. Our study shows that the epithelium lining ciliated hepatic foregut cysts has histological, histochemical, and immunohistochemical features similar to those observed in the bronchiolar epithelium. This lesion is a developmental ventral foregut abnormality that could arise from a bronchiolar bud of the tracheobronchial diverticulum.
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