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Histopathological Changes in the Pancreas from a Spontaneous Hyperglycemic Cynomolgus Monkey

Morphological and immunohistochemical examinations were carried out on the pancreas of a hyperglycemic 5-year-old male cynomolgus monkey. Body weight gradually decreased from 6 months before termination, accompanying a slight reduction in food consumption and anorexia for the last 2 days. The blood...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Toxicologic Pathology 2012, Vol.25(3), pp.215-219
Main Authors: Fujisawa, Hideki, Zhang, Zean, Sun, Wei, Huang, Mingshu, Kobayashi, Junichi, Yasuda, Hitoshi, Kinoshita, Yuichi, Ando, Ryo, Tamura, Kazutoshi
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Morphological and immunohistochemical examinations were carried out on the pancreas of a hyperglycemic 5-year-old male cynomolgus monkey. Body weight gradually decreased from 6 months before termination, accompanying a slight reduction in food consumption and anorexia for the last 2 days. The blood glucose level was markedly elevated when examined at termination. Histopathologically, in the exocrine pancreas, diffuse hyperplasia of centroacinar and intercalated duct cells and diffuse atrophy of acinar cells with sporadic apoptosis were observed, although most centroacinar and intercalated duct cells were proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA)-positive in both the present case and age-matched control animals. In the endocrine pancreas, the islets tended to be hypertrophic, with an increase in insulin-positive cells in comparison with the age-matched control animals. PCNA-positive cells also tended to increase in the islets, although positive cells for phospho-histone H3, a marker for mitotic cells, were not detected in the endocrine and exocrine pancreas. Moreover, neither inflammation nor amyloidosis was noted in the islets. In conclusion, the present case probably suffered from early-stage type 2 diabetes mellitus, and it provides fundamental information concerning pancreatic histopathology under insulin-related derangement in monkeys.
ISSN:0914-9198
1881-915X
1347-7404
DOI:10.1293/tox.25.215