Abstract: | In the rabbit, pancreatic duct ligation leads to serious disturbances of the pancreatic endocrine parenchyma. Immunocytochemical studies conducted over a short period (between 5 and 30 days post ligation) allow observation of a progressive dissociation of the Langerhans islets which initially affects the splenic part of the pancreas, a region where numerous large islets are found. This dissociation is followed by a dispersion of small heterologous endocrine cell clusters or isolated endocrine cells in a connective tissue which replace the exocrine parenchyma. On the 30th day after ligation ultrastructural studies show marked degranulation of the B cells demonstrating the great fragility of these cells. These observations of insular dissociation, scattering of the different endocrine cells and impairment of B cells are often reported in experimental and pathological studies of the pancreas. |