Abstract
The endocrine cells of the oxyntic mucosa of five patients with longstanding Zollinger-Ellison syndrome were quantitatively investigated with electron microscopy and two light microscopic methods (Grimelius and immunostaining for chromogranin A). Ultrastructurally, the volume density of endocrine cells was 3.2% ± 1.1% of the mucosal epithelial component, a 168% increase (P < 0.001) over the value found in normal subjects. Of the six endocrine cell types of human oxyntic mucosa, only enterochromaffinlike cells increased in cell density (65% ± 15% of the total endocrine cell mass), size, and number of cell profiles per unit area. The enterochromaffinlike cells also underwent morphological changes of secretory granules with a decrease in vacuolated forms, increase in elongated profiles, and appearance of granules with a punctate structure of the core. The latter variety of granules was previously observed only in carcinoid tumors of the oxyntic mucosa and is possibly related to the enterochromaffinlike cell hyperplasia-neoplasia sequence seen in hypergastrinemic patients. A positive relationship was found between endocrine cell densities evaluated ultrastructurally and with chromogranin A immunostaining. It is concluded that in Zollinger-Ellison syndrome, the trophic effects induced by longstanding hypergastrinemia are strictly selective for enterochromaffinlike cells and are associated with ultrastructural features typical for enterochromaffinlike cell tumors.
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