Title of article :
Histological, Histochemical and Biochemical Changes in the Liver, Kidney, Lung and Spleen under the Effect of Repetitive Hyperthermia in Rat Neonates
Author/Authors :
Ahmed, RR Department of Zoology - Faculty of Science - Beni-Suef University, Egypt , Mazher, Kh Department of Cytology and Histology - Faculty of Veterinary Medicine - Beni-Suef University, Egypt
Abstract :
Background: Artificial hyperthermia in association with radiotherapy or
chemotherapy has become a promising method for cancer treatment. Thus, this study
was designed to assess the impact of repetitive hyperthermia (41° ± 0.5°C) on
some normal histological, histochemical, and biochemical variables in newborn rats.
Materials and methods: After parturition, the neonates were randomly chosen and
assigned to two groups (each being comprised of ten animals): one group was
exposed to hyperthermia (41° ± 0.5°C) and the other one was exposed to
normothermia (25° ± 0.5°C). Both groups were treated daily for 2 hours from the
day of labor until the age of 21 days.
Results: Histological and histochemical examination of the tissue sections of
hypothermic rat neonates exhibited numerous cirrhotic changes in liver with
deposition of collagen fibers extending from the central veins or portal tracts
forming thick or thin fibrotic septa and even pseudolobule formations. The kidneys
showed areas of necrosis, edema, glomerular hyperplasia or infiltration of
inflammatory cells, marked amounts of collagen surrounding some Malpigian
corpuscles and in between the renal tubules in a focal or diffuse fashion. The lungs
revealed alveolar haemorrhage, focal fibrosis, emphysema of the alveoli with
rupture of some alveolar walls and hyperplasia of the cells lining alveoli with
collagen distribution in the peribronchiolar area as well as in the tunica adventitia
of the peribronchiolar dilated blood vessels, and in the interalveolar and
perialveolar areas. The spleen suffered from severe hyperemia in the red pulps
and sinusoids with distorted lymphoid nodules and atrophy of others. The
quantitative measurement of the degree of fibrosis proved a significant (p < 0. 01)
accumulation of collagen fibers in all the examined tissues except for spleen. Additionally, hyperthermia caused a significant increase in most measured serum
biochemical variables (ALT, AST, GGT, LDH, total bilirubin, total protein, albumin,
creatinine & urea) except for the globulin content whose concentration showed a
significant decrease.
Conclusion: As high preferential absorption ability of tumour tissue components to
heat over normal tissues rely, in part, upon their higher collagen and protein
content, attention should be paid to the repetitive effect of high temperature on the
architecture of normal tissues, total collagen and protein contents in addition to its
upshots on certain biochemical indices to appraise the impact of the method on
patients particularly newborns and those with multi-recurrences carcinoma.
Keywords :
hyperthermia , histopathology , histochemistry , biochemistry , rat newborns