Abstract
An increase in the number of Ag-NORs has been described as a possible marker for histopathological cancer diagnosis. The ultrastructural correlation of the reaction, however, has never been elucidated. In tissue samples of the endocervix of the uterus, we compared the ultrastructural configuration of Ag-NORs with the number of Ag-NORs dots. Light microscopic studies showed that the number of Ag-NORs in adenocarcinoma cells significantly increased, but the relation to the bromodeoxyuridine labeling index was not determined. By electron microscopy, Ag-NORs were only observed in the nucleoli and the nuclear bodies of nuclei. Ag-NORs were localized on all components of the nucleolar structure, but the dense fibrillar component was the predominant site in several cases. The nuclear bodies were exclusively found in adenocarcinoma cells and were argyrophilic. A spotted distribution of Ag-NORs was often found in the nucleoli of adenocarcinoma cells that showed an increased Ag-NOR count. The number of Ag-NORs was attributed not only to the number of nucleoli and nuclear bodies in a nucleus but also to the speckled distribution of silver deposits in a nucleolus. These results imply that the Ag-NOR count is a more definitive indicator of a hyperactive state of the cells than the combined number of nucleoli and nuclear bodies in adenocarcinoma of the uterine cervix.
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