Immunohistochemistrical and clinicopathological characterization of chronic endometritis
- PMID: 21749546
- DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-0897.2011.01051.x
Immunohistochemistrical and clinicopathological characterization of chronic endometritis
Abstract
Problem: Chronic endometritis is an elusive entity that is often asymptomatic and undetectable by conventional endometrial biopsy and histological examination. Using immunohistochemistry for full-thickness endometrium, we sought for its clinicopathological features.
Method of study: Two hundred and thirty-four archival endometrial specimens obtained by hysterectomy were immunostained for the plasmacyte marker syndecan-1 to identify chronic endometritis. Endometrial morphology was dated by the standard criteria. The immunoreactive cells were enumerated in 10 non-overlapping endometrial stromal areas. The clinical parameters were obtained from the medical charts.
Results: Chronic endometritis was identified in 11.1% of the samples examined. Its occurrence was similar between the proliferative phase and secretory phase. A total of 23.1% of the cases were asymptomatic. Stromal plasmacyte infiltration and morphological delay were more prominent in symptomatic chronic endometritis than in asymptomatic counterpart.
Conclusions: Chronic endometritis is a common gynecological pathological condition and more often asymptomatic than ever expected. There was no menstrual cycle-dependent fluctuation in its occurrence.
© 2011 John Wiley & Sons A/S.
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