Hyperplasia of vagal and carotid body paraganglia in patients with chronic hypoxemia.

Vagal and carotid body paraganglia were obtained from 43 randomly selected autopsies performed at the National Naval Medical Center. In each case, tissue from both sides was step sectioned and comparatively studied. The mean combined weight of carotid bodies in 37 control patients was 25.9 mg. There was good correlation between size and number of separate paraganglia comprising the vagal body (seven left, six right). Lobules were closely related to the ganglion nodosum and were actually within it in three instances. Tissue resembling parathyroid was encountered within 4 of the 86 resected vagus nerves. Lymphocytic infiltration occurred in carotid and vagal body paraganglia of 28% and 16% of patients, respectively. There was Schwann cell proliferatation in carotid body lobules of 2 patients; in another patient, talc emboli were present. The mean combined weight of carotid bodies in 6 patients with chronic hypoxemia was 47.6 mg, significantly greater than in the control group; in each case, lobules were enlarged. Chief cell hyperplasia occurred in vagal body paraganglia of 2 patients; in two other patients, lobules were large with equal proliferation of constituent cells. These morphologic findings indicate that in patients with chronic hypoxemia some vagal body paraganglia can be ascribed a chemoreceptor role similar to but probably less important than that of the carotid body.

[1]  J. Woodruff,et al.  Malignant: Paragangliomas of the head and neck region, a clinical study of 69 patients , 1977 .

[2]  J. Severinghaus,et al.  Regulation of respiration (first of three parts). , 1977, The New England journal of medicine.

[3]  J. V. Johannessen,et al.  Histochemical and ultrastructural studies of chemodectoma-like tumors in the cod (Gadus morrhua L.). , 1977, Laboratory investigation; a journal of technical methods and pathology.

[4]  R. Naeye The sudden infant death syndrome: a review of recent advances. , 1977, Archives of pathology & laboratory medicine.

[5]  E. Lack Carotid body hypertrophy in patients with cystic fibrosis and cyanotic congenital heart disease. , 1977, Human pathology.

[6]  J. Arias-Stella,et al.  Chronic hypoxia and chemodectomas in bovines at high altitudes. , 1976, Archives of pathology & laboratory medicine.

[7]  J. Skandalakis,et al.  Embryological considerations of thyroid surgery: developmental anatomy of the thyroid, parathyroids and the recurrent laryngeal nerve. , 1976, The American surgeon.

[8]  J. Arias-Stella,et al.  Chief cell hyperplasia in the human carotid body at high altitudes; physiologic and pathologic significance. , 1976, Human pathology.

[9]  A. Pearse The APUD cell concept and its implications in pathology. , 1974, Pathology annual.

[10]  M. Valdés-Dapena,et al.  Editorial: Sudden, unexpected and unexplained death in infancy--a status report--1973. , 1973, The New England journal of medicine.

[11]  M. Saldana,et al.  High altitude hypoxia and chemodectomas. , 1973, Human pathology.

[12]  K. Nishi,et al.  Chemoreceptor synapses in the carotid body. , 1972, Federation proceedings.

[13]  S. Sampson Innervation of the carotid body: another point of view. , 1972, Federation proceedings.

[14]  D. Heath,et al.  Post-mortem size and structure of the human carotid body , 1970, Thorax.

[15]  G. Glenner,et al.  Histology and ultrastructure of carotid body paragangliomas. Comparison with the normal gland , 1967, Cancer.

[16]  E. Neil,et al.  The excitation mechanism of the carotid body. , 1963, British medical bulletin.

[17]  C. Heymans Action of drugs on carotid body and sinus. , 1955, Pharmacological reviews.

[18]  J. Birrell,et al.  The vagal body and its tumour. , 1953, The Australian and New Zealand journal of surgery.

[19]  H. Seto,et al.  On the paraganglia in the ganglion of the vagus nerve. , 1950, The Tohoku journal of experimental medicine.

[20]  R. Lattes Nonchromaffin paraganglioma of ganglion nodosum, carotid body, and aortic‐arch bodies , 1950, Cancer.

[21]  J. H. Comroe,et al.  THE CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE OF THE CAROTID AND AORTIC BODIES , 1944 .

[22]  J. Gilmour Some developmental abnormalities of the thymus and parathyroids , 1941 .

[23]  J. Gilmour The embryology of the parathyroid glands, the thymus and certain associated rudiments , 1937 .