1. Elastin in pulmonary pathology
- Author
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Yukio Nakatani, Alain C. Borczuk, Ximena Baez-Navarro, Teodora Radonic, Noriko Motoi, Yuko Minami, Erik Thunnissen, Masayuki Noguchi, Hans Blaauwgeers, Daisuke Matsubara, Wim Timens, and Yuichi Ishikawa
- Subjects
Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Histology ,Lung Neoplasms ,Connective tissue ,Adenocarcinoma of Lung ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Diagnosis, Differential ,medicine ,Humans ,Pulmonary pathology ,Lung ,biology ,business.industry ,Histocytochemistry ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Staining ,Elastin ,Pulmonary Alveoli ,Adenocarcinoma, Papillary ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,biology.protein ,Pleura ,Papillary carcinoma ,Collagen ,business - Abstract
Elastin and collagen are the main components of the lung connective tissue network, and together provide the lung with elasticity and tensile strength. In pulmonary pathology, elastin staining is used to variable extents in different countries. These uses include evaluation of the pleura in staging, and the distinction of invasion from collapse of alveoli after surgery (iatrogenic collapse). In the latter, elastin staining is used to highlight distorted but pre-existing alveolar architecture from true invasion. In addition to variable levels of use and experience, the interpretation of elastin staining in some adenocarcinomas leads to interpretative differences between collapsed lepidic patterns and true papillary patterns. This review aims to summarise the existing data on the use of elastin staining in pulmonary pathology, on the basis of literature data and morphological characteristics. The effect of iatrogenic collapse and the interpretation of elastin staining in pulmonary adenocarcinomas is discussed in detail, especially for the distinction between lepidic patterns and papillary carcinoma.
- Published
- 2022