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Exp Mol Pathol ; 71(2): 137-46, 2001 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11599920

ABSTRACT

Piecemeal necrosis, currently called interface hepatitis, is a feature of viral hepatitis as well as autoimmune hepatitis and steatohepatitis. The mechanism of liver cell loss and piecemeal necrosis needs to be determined. We hypothesize that piecemeal necrosis in hepatitis is due to a piecemeal removal of hepatocyte cytoplasm by lymphocytic ingestion. To test this hypothesis, 61 consecutive liver biopsies were examined by light microscopy, by immunohistochemistry and by electron microscopy, and the lymphocytic-hepatocytic interaction was morphologically assessed. In cases of hepatitis C, hepatitis B, autoimmune hepatitis, primary biliary cirrhosis, and steatohepatitis, piecemeal necrosis was found. Using cytokeratin stains, it was apparent that the lymphocyte-hepatocyte interaction and piecemeal necrosis leads first to binding of the lymphocyte to hepatocyte plasma membrane and then blebbing or indentation of the hepatocyte by the lymphocyte, followed by endocytosis of liver cell cellular components and digestion in the lymphocyte lysosomes. This process is repeated while the cytoplasm and the nucleus of the hepatocyte disappear bite by bite, and only nubbins of residual hepatocytic cytoplasm remain, either attached to intact hepatocytes or surrounded and sequestered within scar tissue and lymphocytes. We conclude that piecemeal necrosis is a gradual disappearance of hepatocytes as a result of lymphocyte-hepatocyte binding and ligand internalization of liver surface molecules by the lymphocyte. This gradual process leads to a slow reduction of hepatocyte size and eventual disappearance at the interface between the lobule and portal tracts. To term this new kind of necrosis, we propose the name troxis necrosis, after the Greek noun meaning "nibbling."


Subject(s)
Hepatocytes/pathology , Liver Cirrhosis/pathology , Lymphocytes/pathology , Biopsy , Cell Death , Hepatitis/metabolism , Hepatitis/pathology , Hepatocytes/metabolism , Humans , Immunoenzyme Techniques , Keratins/metabolism , Liver Cirrhosis/classification , Lymphocytes/metabolism , Microscopy, Electron , Mitochondria/pathology
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