Yaron Gil, Asia Zubkov, Jacques Balayla, Aviad Cohen, Ishai Levin
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Apoptosis versus necrosis in tubal ectopic pregnancies following Methotrexate
Methotrexate administration for the treatment of tubal ectopic pregnancies has been shown to cause tubal mass enlargement. Our hypothesis was that, by administrating Methotrexate, a local necrotic reaction occurs, leading to hematoma formation and eventually fallopian tube rupture. Salpingectomy specimens were collected, analysed and divided into three equal groups: patients who received Methotrexate but who ultimately failed medical treatment, patients who had a viable ectopic pregnancy and patients with a self-resolving ectopic pregnancy that were operated due to other medical indications. The specimens were dyed using the Cleaved Caspase-3 (Asp175) Rabbit mA. Specimens were divided into three equal groups and analysed. The patients in self-resolving ectopic pregnancy group were older and had more pregnancies. Rates of apoptosis were found to be less than 1% per slide. Necrosis was not evident in any of the pathological specimens. It seems Methotrexate administration does not lead to a significant tubal necrotic reaction. Further studies are required.
期刊介绍:
Experimental Pathology encompasses the use of multidisciplinary scientific techniques to investigate the pathogenesis and progression of pathologic processes. The International Journal of Experimental Pathology - IJEP - publishes papers which afford new and imaginative insights into the basic mechanisms underlying human disease, including in vitro work, animal models, and clinical research.
Aiming to report on work that addresses the common theme of mechanism at a cellular and molecular level, IJEP publishes both original experimental investigations and review articles. Recent themes for review series have covered topics as diverse as "Viruses and Cancer", "Granulomatous Diseases", "Stem cells" and "Cardiovascular Pathology".