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An immunohistochemical study of oral submucous fibrosis
Author(s) -
Haque M. F.,
Harris M.,
Meghji S.,
Speight P. M.
Publication year - 1997
Publication title -
journal of oral pathology and medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.887
H-Index - 83
eISSN - 1600-0714
pISSN - 0904-2512
DOI - 10.1111/j.1600-0714.1997.tb00025.x
Subject(s) - lamina propria , antigen , pathology , cytotoxic t cell , biology , epithelium , cd8 , cd20 , connective tissue , immunoperoxidase , mhc class ii , fibrosis , cd3 , antibody , immunology , major histocompatibility complex , medicine , monoclonal antibody , biochemistry , in vitro
Oral submucous fibrosis (OSF) is a chronic disease of the oral cavity characterized by inflammation and progressive mucosal fibrosis. These reactions may be the result of either direct stimulation from exogenous antigens like areca alkaloids or by changes in tissue antigenicity that may lead to an autoimmune response. This study investigated the presence and distribution of inflammatory cells and MHC class II antigen expression by epithelial and immunocompetent cells using a three‐stage immunoperoxidase method on frozen sections. Thirty OSF tissue specimens and ten normal buccal mucosae were studied and compared. All tissues were investigated using antibodies to T cells (CD3), T helper/inducer cells (CD4), T suppressor/cytotoxic cells (CD8), B cells (CD20), naive T cells and monocytes (CD45RA), macrophages. Langerhans' cells (CD68) and HLA‐DR‐positive cells (HLA‐DR alpha). The predominant cell populations detected in normal tissues were CD3, CD4 and HLA‐DR‐positive cells. The distribution of CD4‐positive cells was similar to that of CD3‐positive cells, which were scattered, often uniformly distributed, both in the epithelium and connective tissue. CD8‐positive cells were occasionally seen in the normal epithelium and lamina propria. Few scattered B cells (CD20) and macrophages (CD681) were observed in normal mucosa. Naive T cells (CD45RA) were seen in all normal tissues focally concentrated around the connective tissue papillae with a similar distribution to that of CD3‐positive cells. All normal sections showed HLA‐DR‐positive cells scattered both in the epithelium and in the lamina propria. Epithelial cells did not show any positive reaction to this antibody and many intraepithelial positive cells showed a dendritic morphology. The cell populations detected in OSF showed higher numbers of CD3 and HLA‐DR‐positive cells compared with those of the normal tissues. The pattern of staining for CD4‐positive cells in OSF tissues was similar to that of CD3‐positive cells both in the epithelium and connective tissue and was higher than that in normal tissues. A few scattered CD8‐positive cells and only occasional CD20‐ and CD68‐positive cells were seen in OSF sections. Few CD45RA‐positive cells were found in the epithelium and lamina propria of OSF sections. However, OSF specimens showed high numbers of HLA‐DR‐positive cells in the basal layer of the epithelium, juxtaepithelium and in the lamina propria in a similar distribution to that of CD3 cells compared with the normal tissues. Most HLA‐DR‐positive cells in the epithelium showed dendrites directed vertically towards the surface. The increased evidence of CD4 and HLA‐DR‐positive cells in OSF tissues suggests that most lymphocytes were activated and shows an increased presence of Langerhans' cells. The presence of these immunocompetent cells and high ratio of CD4 to CD8 in OSF tissues suggest an ongoing cellular immune response leading to a possible imbalance of immunoregulation and alteration in local tissue architecture.