Increased submucosal nerve trunk caliber in aganglionosis: a "positive" and objective finding in suction biopsies and segmental resections in Hirschsprung's disease
- PMID: 9701334
Increased submucosal nerve trunk caliber in aganglionosis: a "positive" and objective finding in suction biopsies and segmental resections in Hirschsprung's disease
Abstract
Objective: To establish the diagnostic usefulness of submucosal hypertrophic nerve trunk morphology in Hirschsprung's disease as a quantifiable parameter supportive of aganglionosis on hematoxylin-eosin-stained sections.
Design: We retrospectively evaluated size and density of submucosal nerves on hematoxylin-eosin-stained sections and S100 protein-stained sections of resected segments from 13 patients with Hirschsprung's disease, and in sections of 20 aganglionic and 50 ganglionic rectal suction biopsies.
Setting: All patients were seen at Childrens Hospital Los Angeles (Calif), a tertiary-care pediatric center; the age of patients at diagnosis or resection ranged between 2 days and 3 years.
Results: Aganglionic segments contain many distinct nerve trunks greater than 40 microm in diameter. Ganglionic segments/biopsies showed no nerve trunk larger than this threshold value (P approximately .0000). Nerve trunks of such caliber are rarely encountered in pathologic transition zones and sites of colostomy.
Conclusions: Submucosal nerve trunks that are 40 microm or greater in diameter strongly correlate with abnormal innervation/aganglionosis. Use of this objective parameter in evaluating suction biopsies should be helpful in the morphologic diagnosis of Hirschsprung's disease in infancy and early childhood.