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Morphology and Histochemistry of Infant Testes in the Prune Belly Syndrome

31

Citations

18

References

1991

Year

Abstract

Testicular biopsy samples from 3 boys 5.5, 6 and 7 months old with the prune belly syndrome and intra-abdominal testes were examined morphologically and phenotypically for the presence of alkaline phosphatase. Findings were compared with those in age-matched autopsy controls. All patient specimens demonstrated atypical germ cells with large nuclei and prominent nucleoli, and intense alkaline phosphatase staining localized to the cytoplasmic membrane. The presence of these testicular abnormalities suggests that a developmental arrest is fundamental to the pathogenesis of the undescended testes associated with the prune belly syndrome. The similarity of the histological appearance of these testes to that of intratubular germ cell neoplasia suggests that long-term followup of these patients for the development of invasive germ cell tumors is important.

References

YearCitations

1987

742

1961

194

1981

162

1967

144

1987

126

1987

108

1987

107

1983

95

1982

75

1965

71

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