Light bodies in human pituitary adenomas.

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Light bodies are large cytoplasmic granules originally described in the gonadotrophic cells of the rat pituitary gland. In order to determine whether similar bodies occur in the human anterior pituitary gland, 89 pituitary adenomas and periadenomatous tissue from 20 cases were examined by transmission electron microscopy. Double membrane bound bodies with filamentous internal structure identical to rodent light bodies were identified in 10 hormone-producing adenomas: 5 PRL, 1 PRL-GH, 2 GH, and 2 ACTH-producing tumours. No light bodies were found in the remaining 79 tumours nor in the pituitary cells in periadenomatous tissue from 20 cases. These results show that some human pituitary adenomas may contain light bodies identical to those seen in gonadotrophs of rat pituitary.
Original languageEnglish
JournalVirchows Archiv
Volume411
Issue number4
Pages (from-to)311-4
Number of pages3
ISSN0945-6317
Publication statusPublished - 1987

Bibliographical note

Keywords: Adenoma; Adult; Female; Humans; Male; Microscopy, Electron; Organoids; Pituitary Hormones; Pituitary Neoplasms

ID: 5236976