首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Lanthanum-Induced Mucosal Alterations in the Stomach (Lanthanum Gastropathy): a Comparative Study Using an Animal Model
Authors:Kei Yabuki  Joji Haratake  Yojiro Tsuda  Eisuke Shiba  Hiroshi Harada  Kenji Yorita  Kazuyoshi Uchihashi  Atsuji Matsuyama  Keiji Hirata  Masanori Hisaoka
Affiliation:1.Department of Pathology and Oncology, School of Medicine,University of Occupational and Environmental Health,Kitakyushu,Japan;2.Department of Surgery 1, School of Medicine,University of Occupational and Environmental Health,Kitakyushu,Japan;3.Division of Pathology,Saiseikai Yahata General Hospital,Kitakyushu,Japan;4.Department of Diagnostic Pathology,Japanese Red Cross Kochi Hospital,Kochi,Japan;5.Department of Surgical Pathology,Kyushu Rosai Hospital,Kitakyushu,Japan
Abstract:
Lanthanum (La) carbonate (LC) is one of the most potent phosphate binders that prevents the elevation of serum phosphate levels in patients with end-stage renal diseases undergoing dialysis. LC binds strongly to dietary phosphate and forms insoluble complexes that pass through the gastrointestinal tract. La deposition in patients treated with LC is a recently documented finding particularly observed in gastric mucosa. We herein describe the detailed gastric mucosal lesions in 45 LC-treated patients and address the potential underlying pathologic mechanism using oral LC administration in rats. Microscopically, La deposition, as shown by subepithelial collections of plump eosinophilic histiocytes or small foreign body granulomas containing coarse granular or amorphous inclusion bodies, was found in the gastric mucosa of 44 (97.8%) of the 45 dialysis patients in the study cohort, which was most frequently associated with foveolar hyperplasia (37.8%). Using oral administration of rats with 1000 mg/day LC for 2 or more weeks, La deposition was consistently detectable in the gastric mucosa but not in other organs examined. In addition, various histologic alterations such as glandular atrophy, stromal fibrosis, proliferation of mucous neck cells, intestinal metaplasia, squamous cell papilloma, erosion, and ulcer were demonstrated in the rat model. Thus, orally administered LC can induce mucosal injury, designated here as La gastropathy, which may alter the local environment and result in La deposition in the gastric mucosa, thereby potentially inducing abnormal cell proliferation or neoplastic lesions.
Keywords:
本文献已被 SpringerLink 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号