Abstract

Purpose: The article reports on a comparative analysis of biological specimens of lung tissues collected from workers with pulmonary fibrosis induced by internal exposure to plutonium alpha-particles (plutonium-induced pulmonary fibrosis [PuPF]) and with etiologically different pulmonary fibrosis (non-PuPF) that developed as an outcome of a chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).Materials and methods: To perform histological examinations, lung tissues were sampled during autopsy. Six samples of various lung regions (the apical region, the lingula of the left lung and the inferior lobe) were collected from each donor. The resected tissue samples were fixed in 10% neutral-buffered formalin during 24 h and embedded into paraffin blocks (FFPE). FFPE blocks with lung tissue specimens collected from 56 workers with PuPF, 34 workers with non-PuPF and 35 workers without any lung disease were used in the study. To perform microscopic examination, lung tissue specimens were hematoxylin and eosin stained. To examine the connective-tissue scaffold of lung stroma and identify foci of pulmonary fibrosis, the cut sections of paraffin blocks were stained by Van Gizon’s method (to assess the total volume of fibrosis-affected tissues), Gomori’s technique (to define the reticular scaffold of lung stroma) and Weigert’s technique (to examine elastic fibers). Morphological patterns of all biological specimens were studied using immunohistochemistry. To fit the empirical data, the Weibull’s model was used.Results and conclusions: The study found qualitative and quantitative morphological features specific for PuPF compared to non-PuPF. The study demonstrated that hyper-production of collagen type V plays a key role in PuPF. The collagen type V content in fibrotic foci in lung tissue specimens from workers with PuPF was found to be increased.

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