Abstract
This study was conducted to determine whether scanning electron microscopy of colonic mucosal biopsy specimens can help to detect dysplasia in patients with chronic ulcerative colitis. In the first phase of the study, using light microscopy as the standard for the diagnosis, the scanning electron microscopic appearance of specimens from patients with chronic ulcerative colitis and control patients was examined. Descriptive criteria were established to identify normal, atrophic, and dysplastic colonic mucosa. In the second phase, quantitative techniques were used to develop more objective criteria for the diagnosis of dysplasia in ulcerative colitis. Twenty-one coded colonic specimens from 11 patients were sequentially examined by scanning electron microscopy and by light microscopy. The three morphometric analyses performed on the surface epithelial cells were number of cells per unit area, number of microvilli per unit area, and percentage of microvilli with a normal width. The cell count and percentage of microvilli with a normal width were significantly reduced in the seven specimens with colonic dysplasia as compared with nondys-plastic tissues. Scanning electron microscopy may serve as an adjunct to light microscopy in the diagnosis of colonic dysplasia.
Published Version
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