From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Arias-Stella phenomenon)
Micrograph showing Arias-Stella reaction in endometrium

Arias-Stella reaction, also Arias-Stella phenomenon, is a benign change in the endometrium associated with the presence of chorionic tissue. [1]

Arias-Stella reaction is due to progesterone primarily. Cytologically, it looks like a malignancy and, historically, it was diagnosed as endometrial cancer. [1]

Significance

It is significant only because it can be misdiagnosed as a cancer. It may be seen in a completely normal pregnancy.

Diagnosis

It is characterized by nuclear enlargement and may also have any of the following: an irregular nuclear membrane, granular chromatin, centronuclear vacuolization, and pseudonuclear inclusions. [1]

Five subtypes are recognized: [1]

  1. Minimal atypia.
  2. Early secretory pattern.
  3. Secretory or hypersecretory pattern.
  4. Regenerative, proliferative or nonsecretory pattern.
  5. Monstrous cell pattern.

History

It was first described by Javier Arias Stella, a Peruvian pathologist, in 1954. [2]

See also

Molar ectopic

References

  1. ^ a b c d Arias-Stella, J. (Jan 2002). "The Arias-Stella reaction: facts and fancies four decades after". Adv Anat Pathol. 9 (1): 12–23. doi: 10.1097/00125480-200201000-00003. PMID  11756756. S2CID  26249687.
  2. ^ Arias-Stella, J. (Aug 1954). "Atypical endometrial changes associated with the presence of chorionic tissue". Arch Pathol. 58 (2): 112–28. PMID  13170908.

Bibliography

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Arias-Stella phenomenon)
Micrograph showing Arias-Stella reaction in endometrium

Arias-Stella reaction, also Arias-Stella phenomenon, is a benign change in the endometrium associated with the presence of chorionic tissue. [1]

Arias-Stella reaction is due to progesterone primarily. Cytologically, it looks like a malignancy and, historically, it was diagnosed as endometrial cancer. [1]

Significance

It is significant only because it can be misdiagnosed as a cancer. It may be seen in a completely normal pregnancy.

Diagnosis

It is characterized by nuclear enlargement and may also have any of the following: an irregular nuclear membrane, granular chromatin, centronuclear vacuolization, and pseudonuclear inclusions. [1]

Five subtypes are recognized: [1]

  1. Minimal atypia.
  2. Early secretory pattern.
  3. Secretory or hypersecretory pattern.
  4. Regenerative, proliferative or nonsecretory pattern.
  5. Monstrous cell pattern.

History

It was first described by Javier Arias Stella, a Peruvian pathologist, in 1954. [2]

See also

Molar ectopic

References

  1. ^ a b c d Arias-Stella, J. (Jan 2002). "The Arias-Stella reaction: facts and fancies four decades after". Adv Anat Pathol. 9 (1): 12–23. doi: 10.1097/00125480-200201000-00003. PMID  11756756. S2CID  26249687.
  2. ^ Arias-Stella, J. (Aug 1954). "Atypical endometrial changes associated with the presence of chorionic tissue". Arch Pathol. 58 (2): 112–28. PMID  13170908.

Bibliography


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