Patterns of basement membrane deposition in benign, premalignant, and malignant endometrium.
Open Access
- 1 November 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by BMJ in Journal of Clinical Pathology
- Vol. 40 (11), 1320-1323
- https://doi.org/10.1136/jcp.40.11.1320
Abstract
Immunocytochemical staining for laminin, an intrinsic basement membrane component, was used to show and quantify the distribution of basement membranes in endometrium. In normal endometrium, glands which are not mechanically disrupted have almost entirely continuous basement membranes, even in the menstrual phase. This is also seen in benign cystic hyperplasia. In atypical hyperplasia a small proportion of glands show small breaks in basement membrane staining in the absence of invasion. The number of breaks increases with more severe cytological changes, and this abnormality may persist even when a second biopsy specimen shows an apparent return to normal morphology. Invasive tumours show a strikingly different pattern of basement membrane staining, even when very well differentiated.This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Patterns of basement membrane deposition in benign and malignant breast tumoursHistopathology, 1986
- Recent studies on the structure and pathology of basement membranesThe Journal of Pathology, 1986
- Tumour basement membrane laminin in adenocarcinoma of rectum: An immunohistochemical study of biological and clinical significanceInternational Journal of Cancer, 1986
- Usefulness of basement membrane markers in tumoural pathologyThe Journal of Pathology, 1985
- Basement membrane Laminin and Type IV Collagen in Various Benign and Malignant Adnexal Tumors of the Skin: An Immunohistochemical StudyJournal of Investigative Dermatology, 1984
- Degradation of basement membrane collagens by metalloproteases released by human, murine and amphibian tumoursThe Journal of Pathology, 1984
- Remodelling of the Basement Membrane: Morphogenesis and MaturationPublished by Wiley ,1984
- Localization of type IV collagen, laminin, heparan sulfate proteoglycan, and fibronectin to the basal lamina of basement membranes.The Journal of cell biology, 1982
- Demonstration of laminin, a basement membrane glycoprotein, in routinely processed formalin-fixed human tissuesHistochemistry and Cell Biology, 1982
- BASEMENT-MEMBRANE CHANGES IN BREAST-CANCER DETECTED BY IMMUNOHISTOCHEMICAL STAINING FOR LAMININ1981