| Literature DB >> 16792818 |
Joveeta Joseph1, Geeta K Vemuganti, Prashant Garg, Savitri Sharma.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is limited data on comparing stains in the detection of microsporidia in corneal biopsies. Hence we wanted to evaluate various stains for their ability to detect microsporidia in corneal tissue sections.Entities:
Year: 2006 PMID: 16792818 PMCID: PMC1513581 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6890-6-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Clin Pathol ISSN: 1472-6890
Details of four patients presenting with microsporidial keratitis
| 1 | 2/M | l.5 months | no | stromal oedema, anterior stromal infiltrate |
| 2 | 40/F | 7 months | no | stromal infiltrate, endothelial exudates |
| 3 | 37/M | 4 years | Yes (fingernail) | Corneal opacity |
| 4 | 70/F | 6 months | Yes (grass) | deep stromal infiltrates, endothelial exudates |
M – male
F – female
Figure 1Section of the corneal tissue shows epithelial ulceration, with inflammatory infiltrates in the anterior two-thirds of stroma (hematoxylin & eosin, × 1100) (b) Higher magnification shows polymorphonuclear cells (asterix) and faintly stained, ill-defined oval dot like structures (arrow) between the corneal lamellae (Hematoxylin and Eosin stain, × 400)
Figure 2(a) Under higher magnification, the microsporidal spores are seen as pink oval structures (H & E stain, × 1000); (b) magenta pink oval structures in PAS stain (× 500), (c) deep blue oval structures with dark tip (arrow) in some spores Giemsa stain (× 500), (d) well defined brown oval spores with dark tip or band in Gomoris methenamine silver stain (× 500)
Outline of stains used in histopathological evaluation
| 1 | Hematoxylin and Eosin | pale pink, ill-defined morphology | Most common tissue stain, should raise the suspicion of microsporidia. Appearance may resemble yeasts, needs confirmation by other stains |
| 2 | PAS | pink to purple in colour, ill defined morphology | Poorly stained, but the pink dot at the pole could suggest microsporidia. Not confirmatory |
| 3 | Giemsa | stain not taken up be cell wall, appears blue, | Stains the organism blue, but does not stand out against the blue background with also shows granular debris Easy to perform |
| 4 | GMS | oval to round, brown in colour, internal band is easily spotted, background green | Good stain, highlights the organism again the background under low magnification. Expensive reagents, time consuming |
| 5 | CFW | blue, oval, diffusely fluorescing spores, sometimes only spore wall fluoresced | Easy for experienced observer, but can be confused for yeasts. Produces high background noise |
| 6 | Acridine orange | oval, refractile, yellowish-green to orange fluorescence, no demarcation from the background | Easy for experienced observer, but can be confused for yeasts. Produces high background noise |
| 7 | Gram | gram variable, waist band visible, poor contrast from background, plenty of inflammatory debris | Economical, easy to perform. Variable staining, high background noise is a limitation. Microbiologists find it familiar and easy to extrapolate with cytologic findings |
| 8 | Masson's Trichrome | spores appeared red against a blue background, ill-defined internal morphology | High background noise, difficult to standardize the stain. Pathologists familiarity more than microbiologists |
| 9 | 1% acid fast | oval, bright red with a darkly stained belt across the spore, visible against a blue background | Good contrast, easy interpretation, less time and economical. Unstained forms can also be found |
| 10 | Gram's chromotrope | spores appear purple to pink against green background, characteristic belt visible | Provides good contrast, easy to detect the organism under lower magnification. Has the added advantage of Grams and Massons trichrome, less time |
Figure 3Microsporidal spores are seen as white fluorescent ring like structures in Calcofluor white stain (× 500), (b) dull oval orangish structures in Acridine orange stain (× 500), (c) oval well defined spores with a faint hollow around the spore in Gram stain (× 1000), (d) dark blue uniformely stained bodies in Masson's trichrome stain (× 500)
Figure 4(a) Microsporidal spores are seen as well defined oval reddish bodies with a dark staining of the narrow end of the spore (black) or a waistband (white) closer to the tip of narrow end. Also seen are the unstained blue spores which possibly are immature or degenerating spores (1% acid fast stain, × 1000).(b) The spores are well delineated as purplish pink egg-shaped spores with a darker staining of the tip (white arrow). Even the degenerating spores show the darkly staining tip (black arrow) Gram's chromotrope stain (× 1000)