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  5. The effect of steroid hormones on the size of myometrial cells : a morphometric study
 
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The effect of steroid hormones on the size of myometrial cells : a morphometric study

Author(s)
Seymour, Beverley Lesley
Date Issued
1997
Type
Thesis
Publisher
Cape Technikon
Abstract
The aims of this study were to measure:
1. Myometrial cells of menopausal uteri to establish whether they atrophy after the
menopause.
2. Myometrial cells at different phases of the menstrual cycle to investigate the
influences of oestrogen and progesterone during the cycle.
3. Myometrial cells in the fundus and lower uterine segment to establish whether they
differ in size.
4. Myometrial cells of pregnant uteri to investigate the effect of the hormonal status of
pregnant women on the size of myometrial cells.
5. Neoplastic cells of leiomyomas of the uterus to investigate whether these benign
tumours behave in the same manner as myometrium or, because they are
neoplastic, they react differently.
A preliminary investigation was undertaken to establish the optimal methodology for
this study to measure myometrial and leiomyoma nuclei in the uterus. The aims of this
preliminary investigation were:
1. To test the reproducibility of measurements of myometrial and leiomyoma nuclei in
transverse and cross section.
2. To test five histological staining methods to ascertain the best method for a
morphometric study on uterine cells.
3. To find the minimum sample size of nuclei per section of myometrium or
leiomyoma in order to yield statistically significant results. This preliminary study found that the Haematoxylin and Eosin stain gave the most
statistically reproducible measurements. Subjective assessment of the five staining
methods also found Haematoxylin and Eosin to be optimal.
It was also found during the preliminary study that measuring the myometrial nuclei in
cross rather than transverse section gave the most statistically reproducible
measurements. It was also found that it was best to use an axial ratio criterion of 0,9
when measuring cross-sectioned myometrial nuclei. The optimum sample size per
section was also investigated and it was found that measuring 100 nuclei was
optimal. It was found that in the uteri used in this study there was no statistically significant
decrease in nuclear size after the menopause. It was also found that there was no
statistically significant difference in nuclear size during the different phases of the
menstrual cycle. There was also no notable difference in nuclear size between nuclei
in the fundus and lower segment of the uteri in this study. It was found that there was
a significant increase in the size of nuclei in leiomyomas compared to the normal
myometrial nuclei from the same patient.
The myometrial nuclei from pregnant uteri were also significantly larger than those
from non-gravid uteri.
Additional information
Thesis (MTech (Biomedical Technology))--Cape Technikon,1997.
Subjects

Myometrium

Steroid hormones

Steroid hormones -- A...

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178000019_Seymour_BL_Mtech_Bio_Tech_HWSci_1997_99000816.pdf

Description
Thesis
Size

46.45 MB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum

(MD5):2e8d24a6fcafc5723b44d96e722f3e25

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