Abstract

An abnormally large number of mast cells in the airway lumen may be an important factor in the pathogenesis of bronchial hyperreactivity. However, it is unclear just how many mast cells are present in the lumen of normal or hyperreactive airways, in part because of differences in the histochemical techniques that have been used to identify mast cells and questions about the heterogeneity of mast cells. The present study was done (1) to compare the effectiveness of six techniques in the identification of mast cells obtained from dogs by bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL), (2) to compare the mast cells in the airways of normal mongrel dogs with those from a breed of dog (Basenji-Greyhound) known to have bronchial hyperreactivity, and (3) to determine whether the two-type histochemical classification used for rodent mast cells (formaldehyde-resistant or typical and formaldehyde-sensitive or atypical) applies meaningfully to the mast cells in BAL fluid from dogs. Cells obtained by BAL were fixed with Mota's basic lead acetate or formaldehyde. Mast cells were identified by metachromatic staining with toluidine blue or methylene blue, staining of highly sulfated proteoglycans with Alcian blue or berberine sulfate, and a histochemical reaction for chloroacetate esterase (mast cell chymase). After Mota's fixation, the methods were relatively similar in their effectiveness in determining the number of mast cells in lavage fluid from the mongrel dogs, in that all of the values fell within a narrow range: 0.53 to 0.96% of the total number of cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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