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Abstract

Vital staining with iodine solution has been used to distinguish dysplastic/malignant oral epithelium from normal mucosa. However, little is known about its critical mechanism. The purpose of this study was to visualize how iodine infiltrates the oral epithelium and reacts with glycogen. In addition, we tested the hypothesis that higher cell proliferation requires increased energy consumption, and consequently exhausted glycogen may lead to a failure to be stained by iodine solution.

Fifteen frozen tissue samples of iodine-stained and -unstained mucosa were obtained from 15 cases of oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC). Serial frozen sections were cut and examined with hematoxylin and eosin and periodic acid-Schiff methods and immunohistochemical staining for p53, Ki67 and glucose transporter 1 (GLUT 1).

Iodine solution was able to penetrate normal epithelium to a maximum depth neighboring the parabasal layer, but iodine-stained areas were completely consistent with glycogen distribution only in the upper superficial layer. Iodine-negative epithelium presented significantly higher immunoreactions for P53 and GLUT 1 in basal, parabasal, and superficial layers, respectively, whereas the reaction for Ki67 in the superficial layer was higher than that in iodine-positive epithelium (Wilcoxon signed-rank test, P < 0.05).

Iodine infiltrated and reacted with glycogen mainly in the upper superficial layer of the nonkeratinized epithelium. Both histological and molecular margins can be confirmed by iodine vital staining in OSCC. It is also suggested that high cell proliferation induced elevated glycolysis, resulting in an intraepithelial glycogen degradation and consequent failure to be stained by iodine solution.[PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

Details

Title
Vital staining with iodine solution in oral cancer: iodine infiltration, cell proliferation, and glucose transporter 1
Author
Xiao, Tiepeng; Kurita, Hiroshi; Shimane, Tetsu; Nakanishi, Yoshitaka; Koike, Takeshi
Pages
792-800
Publication year
2013
Publication date
Oct 2013
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
13419625
e-ISSN
14377772
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1442600915
Copyright
Japan Society of Clinical Oncology 2013