Nasal polyposis pathogenesis: a flow cytometric and immunohistochemical study of epithelial cell proliferation

Acta Otolaryngol. 1996 Sep;116(5):755-61. doi: 10.3109/00016489609137920.

Abstract

In nasal polyps, constantly associated with chronic inflammation, frequent epithelial morphological changes (squamous metaplasia, secretory hyperplasia) suggest a dysregulation of epithelial cell proliferation. Cell proliferation in nasal respiratory epithelium was therefore evaluated in nasal polyposis. In 20 patients, we compared cell proliferation in mucosa from the inferior turbinate to these in nasal polyps using two methods: Flow cytometry analyzing first the ploidy and the percentage of S-phase cells (propidium iodide DNA labeling), secondly the percentage of Ki-67-labeled cells and the green fluorescent index (fluorescein-conjugated anti-human Ki-67 antigen labeling, and thirdly the percentage of Ki-67-labeled cells being in S-phase. Immunohistochemistry, quantifying the expression of Ki-67 antigen in the epithelium permitting to calculate a Ki-67 index. All cell-populations studied were diploid. Percentages of S-phase cells, Ki-67-labeled cells, Ki-67 labeled cells being in the S-phase and green fluorescence index was significantly higher in nasal polyps than in mucosa Ki-67 index were significantly higher in nasal polyps than in mucosa in the epithelium. Epithelial cell proliferation which is therefore increased in nasal polyp could play an important role in nasal polyposis pathogenesis and its relationships with inflammation can be suggested.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Cell Division
  • Epithelial Cells
  • Epithelium / pathology
  • Flow Cytometry
  • Humans
  • Immunohistochemistry
  • Nasal Mucosa / cytology
  • Nasal Mucosa / pathology
  • Nasal Polyps / etiology*
  • Nasal Polyps / pathology