Scanning electron microscopic study of the airways in normal children and in patients with cystic fibrosis and other lung diseases

DL Simel, JP Mastin, PC Pratt, CL Wisseman… - Pediatric …, 1984 - Taylor & Francis
DL Simel, JP Mastin, PC Pratt, CL Wisseman, JD Shelburne, A Spock, P Ingram
Pediatric pathology, 1984Taylor & Francis
Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) were
used to examine pulmonary tissue from 9 patients with cystic fibrosis (CF), 12 patients with
diseases other than CF, and from two surgically resected specimens with no known airways
disease. A region of the human airways, the transition zone, was observed between the end
of the terminal bronchiole and the type II alveolar cell lining of the respiratory bronchioles.
This region was lined predominantly by nonciliated bronchiolar (NCB) cells. Patients with CF …
Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) were used to examine pulmonary tissue from 9 patients with cystic fibrosis (CF), 12 patients with diseases other than CF, and from two surgically resected specimens with no known airways disease. A region of the human airways, the transition zone, was observed between the end of the terminal bronchiole and the type II alveolar cell lining of the respiratory bronchioles. This region was lined predominantly by nonciliated bronchiolar (NCB) cells. Patients with CF exhibited indistinct transition zones, epidermoid metaplasia, large dilated bronchial gland, copious surface mucus, alveolar destruction, and unusual microvilli; no single lesion specific for cystic fibrosis was identified.
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