Abstract
By cross-section or longitudinal section, it is difficult to investigate longitudinal features of myocardial cells in the whole heart. Here, introducing the use of tangential sections to obtain longitudinal aspect of myocardial cells in any part of myocardium, the authors evaluated myocardium in the left ventricle in 10 normal hearts and four hearts with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM). Tangential sections were obtained by peeling the superficial layer of myocardium. After peeling the whole surface, secondary deep layer was peeled. These procedures were repeated more than five times through the wall. Intercalated discs (ICD) were observed immunohistochemically with anti-N-cadherin and antidesmoplakin. In normal hearts, myocardial cells were cut longitudinally and ran parallel in tangential sections. They linked end-to-end with simple and regular ICD with average lengths of 120-130 microm and average sarcomere numbers of 56-65. In HCM hearts, many myocardial cells were cut almost longitudinally running approximately parallel in tangential sections. Myocardial cells frequently showed side-to-side linking characterized by skewed ICD, indistinct ICD counterparts, and longitudinally arranged ICD. Two young HCM hearts had circle-shaped ICD and vacuole-like structures highlighted by immunostaining for N-cadherin, which were actually extracellular structures comparable with irregular side-to-side linking. It is considered that side-to-side linking of myocardial cells is a characteristic microscopic feature in HCM rather than myocardial disarray.
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