A Retrospective Survey of Endocardial Proliferative Lesions in Rats

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Abstract

Sixty, proliferative, endocardial lesions were diagnosed in 19,304 rats, for an overall incidence of 0.3%. This population consisted of 10,127 Fischer 344,8,737 Wistar, 200 Sprague-Dawley, and 240 Long Evans rats from chronic/oncogenicity studies reported at Lilly Research Laboratories from 1976 to 1988. Of the 60 proliferative lesions, 44 were classified as endocardial hyperplasia, 15 as endocardial schwannomas, and one as an endocardial sarcoma for prevalence rates of 0.2%, 0.08%, and 0.005%, respectively. Affected rats ranged in age from 42 to 110 weeks. There were no sex or treatment-related differences in the prevalence of the rat endocardial proliferative lesions. A review of endocardial lesions in 18 of 233 Wistar rats treated with carbamate derivatives revealed endocardial hyperplasia in 12 rats, schwannomas in five rats, and a sarcoma in one rat. One of the 12 rats with endocardial hyperplasia also had an intramural schwannoma. Of 200 Wistar rats given N-nitroso-N-methylurca, two had endocardial hyperplasia, and one had an endocardial schwannoma, Morphologic features were similar in either spontaneous or ireatment-associated hyperplasia or neoplasia of the rat endocardium. Probable Schwann cell origin of the endocardial proliferative lesions was indicated by positive immunohistochemical staining for S-100 antigen in 10/12 spontaneous and 11/14 careinogen-associated endocardial hyperplastic lesions. Further, 15/16 spontaneous and 6/7 carcinogen-associated neoplasms were immunoreactive to S-100. No tumor metastasis was recorded in either the spontaneously affected or carcinogen-treated rats. © 1991, American College of Veterinary Pathologists. All rights reserved.

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Novilla, M. N., Sandusky, G. E., Hoover, D. M., Ray, S. E., & Wightman, K. A. (1991). A Retrospective Survey of Endocardial Proliferative Lesions in Rats. Veterinary Pathology, 28(2), 156–165. https://doi.org/10.1177/030098589102800208

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