Thymoma Histopathology: Difference between revisions

Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
(Blanked the page)
 
(3 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
__NOTOC__
{{Thymoma}}
{{CMG}} {{AE}} {{AM}}


Please help WikiDoc by adding more content here.  It's easy!  Click  [[Help:How_to_Edit_a_Page|here]]  to learn about editing.
==Overview==
==Histopathology==
Thymoma originates from the epithelial cell population in the [[thymus]], and several microscopic subtypes are now recognized.There are three principal histological types of thymoma, depending on the appearance of the cells by microscopy:
*Type A if the epithelial cells have an oval or fusiform shape (less lymphocyte count);
*Type B if they have an epithelioid shape (Type B has three subtypes: B1 (lymphocyte-rich), B2 (cortical) and B3 (epithelial).);
*Type AB if the tumor contains a combination of both cell types.
Thymic cortical epithelial cells have abundant cytoplasm, vesicular nucleus with finely divided chromatin and small nucleoli and cytoplasmic filaments contact adjacent cells. Thymic medullary epithelial cells in contrast are spindle shaped with oval dense nucleus and scant cytoplasm thymoma if recapitulates cortical cell features more, is thought to be less benign.
<gallery>
Image:T003.png| Histopathological image of [[Thymoma]] type B1. [[Anterior mediastinal mass]] surgically resected. Hematoxylin & eosin stain
Image:T004.png| Histopathological image representing a noninvasive [[Thymoma]] type B1, surgically resected. Hematoxylin & eosin
Image:T005.jpg| Histopathological image of [[Thymoma]] type B1. Anterior mediastinal mass surgically resected. Cytokeratin CAM5.2 immunostain
</gallery>

Latest revision as of 19:29, 19 February 2014