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J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 1999;117:1233-1234
© 1999 Mosby, Inc.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR |
4101 S Wappel Dr
Columbia, MO 65203
To the Editor:
In the article by Xu and associates
1 dealing with the rejection of pig-to-baboon orthotopic cardiac xenografts,the authors describe microvascular thromboses in a heart that has survived19 days after transplantation (see their Fig. 4). The individual thrombosesare surrounded by damaged cardiomyocytes manifesting a more or less shrunkennucleus located in the midst of a large myocytolytic vacuole or rarefied myofibrils.
Having been intrigued by the curious shapes, high number, and largediameters of the alleged microthromboses, I have found that they often containparts of cardiomyocytes in their lumina. Using Cartesian coordinates and centimetersas units for their exact localization in Fig. 4, the microthrombosis-likestructures containing cardiomyocyte nuclei are located at the following points:x = 0.6, y = 4.1; x = 1.7, y = 1.8; x = 2.5, y = 2.5; x = 6.9, y = 5.6; x= 7.3, y = 3.3. The structures containing myocytolytic vacuoles with or withoutnuclear remains are located at these points: x = 2.4, y = 2.3; x = 3.8, y= 0.3; x = 5.8, y = 0.3; x = 6, y = 2.9; x = 6.8, y = 5.3; x = 7.5, y = 3;x = 7.8, y = 2.6. Finally, the large thrombus-like structure containing rarefiedmyofibrils is present at x = 7.7, y = 3.8. Consequently, the alleged microthrombosesare not vascular structures but "myocardial pseudovascular tubes"2 formed by individual hyalinized cardiomyocytes or their bundles.
Hyalinized cardiomyocytes may undergo apoptotic disintegration into"eosinophilic droplets" similar to red cells,
3,4 creating animpression of interstitial hemorrhage. In Fig. 4,
1 such a process is present in the form of a hook delineatedby the points x = 3.5, y = 0; x = 3, y = 6; x = 7.5, y = 6.9. Note the presenceof several "naked" cardiomyocyte nuclei close to the point x =6.5, y = 6.7. Free cardiomyocyte nuclei were described in Syrian hamster cardiomyopathy
5 and in the delayed rejection ofheart xenografts.
4 Apparently,the apoptotic disintegration of cytoplasm may precede that of the nucleus.
6
The purpose of this letter is not to deny the presence of genuine microthromboses,which were well documented by electron microscopy in the hyperacute and delayedrejections of cardiac xenografts and allografts,
7 but to increase the awareness of myocardial pseudovasculartubes in the same situations.
12/8/98219
[Response declined]
References
This article has been cited by other articles:
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S. Yi, W. J. Hawthorne, A. M. Lehnert, H. Ha, J. K. W. Wong, N. van Rooijen, K. Davey, A. T. Patel, S. N. Walters, A. Chandra, et al. T Cell-Activated Macrophages Are Capable of Both Recognition and Rejection of Pancreatic Islet Xenografts J. Immunol., March 1, 2003; 170(5): 2750 - 2758. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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R. H. Chen, R. S. Farivar, and D. H. Adams Reply J. Thorac. Cardiovasc. Surg., February 1, 2001; 121(2): 401 - 401. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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