Abstract

Nonspecific alkaline phosphatase activity was identified in human normal and diseased breasts with the use of the calcium-cobalt, the lead-nitrate, and the azo-dye methods. The results varied not only with the staining method, but also with the functional status of the breast structures. In normal, dysplastic, and fibroadenomatous tissues there was a strong parallelism between myoepithelial and capillary enzyme activities. The calcium-cobalt method was the only technique which allowed staining of carcinoma cells; cancer stromal enzyme activity was evidenced only with the use of the same method. Our findings suggest that nonspecific alkaline phosphatase activity probably reflects a functional status of the labelled structures; the enzyme activity of myoepithelial cells is variable and not really specific.

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