INVESTIGADORES
SALVETTI Natalia Raquel
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
Analysis and importance of pathological background lesions of the rat and mouse heart: preliminary result.
Autor/es:
186. SACCO SC; BELOTTI EM; NOTARO US; SÁNCHEZ CÓRDOBA ID; SALVETTI NR; ORTEGA HH
Lugar:
Mar del Plata. Buenos Aires. Argentina.
Reunión:
Congreso; Reunión anual de sociedades de Biociencias: SAIC, SAFE, SAP, AACYTAL, NANOMED-ar, HCS. 13-16 de noviembre de 2019.; 2019
Institución organizadora:
SAIC
Resumen:
Background (incidental) lesions have been described as findings that are usually thought of as a change in tissue morphology outside of the range of normal variation for a particular species or strain. The myocardium is susceptible to a variety of morphologic changes in routine toxicity studies and background lesions need to be differentiated from real lesions related to drug treatment. The aim of this study was to do a retrospective analysis of background lesions in the heart in Wistar/Cmedc rats and Balb/c Cmedc mice. They were healthy animal from production area and control groups of preclinical and toxicological studies reported at Centro de Medicina Comparada (ICiVet-Litoral) from 2016 to 2019. Animals were necropsied and hearts were fixed in 10 % buffered formalin, embedded in paraffin, sectioned at 4 μm, and stained routinely with hematoxylin and eosin. Heart lesions from 29 rats (22 male and 7 female) and 34 mice (14 male and 20 female) were reviewed. Background lesions in the heart were observed in 22 of rats (76 %) and 17 of mice (50 %). The following lesion were describer: cardiomyocyte vacuolation in 9 rats (31 %) and 2 mice (6 %), inflammatory cell infiltration in 5 rats (17 %) and 6 mice (18 %), valvular myxomatous degeneration in 7 rats (24 %), aortic cartilaginous metaplasia in 6 rats (21 %), hemorrhage in 1 rat (3 %), thrombi in the atrium in 3 mice (9 %) and valvular endocarditis, cardiomyocyte atrophy, mineralization and fibroplasia in 1 mouse (3 %). Pathologists need to recognize background lesions in acute and chronic toxicity studies because many of the lesions can be mistaken or increased by treatment-related findings in preclinical studies. The importance of background lesions in toxicopathology studies is variable and related to the change type, severity and size.