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Aberrant crypts: putative preneoplastic foci in human colonic mucosa.
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1991
Year
MedicinePathogenesisImmunologyGastroenterologyPathologyHistopathologyColorectal CancerMethylene BlueGastrointestinal PathologyMolecular PathologyAberrant CryptsGut BarrierColon CancerMolecular DiagnosticsHuman Pathology
Aberrant crypts were identified for the first time in whole-mount preparations of normal-appearing human colonic mucosa after staining with methylene blue. The foci of aberrant crypts varied from single altered glands to plaques of greater than 30 crypts. The mean proportion of colonic mucosa altered and the number of foci with aberrant crypts per cm2 of colonic mucosa were (a) higher in patients with colon cancer than in patients without colon cancer or predisposing conditions and (b) highest in our single case of Gardner's syndrome. Aberrant crypts are postulated to be the earliest identifiable potential precursors of colon cancer. Analysis of aberrant crypts may facilitate the study of the early pathological and molecular changes that precede colon cancer.