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The clinical pathology of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS): a report from China.

Authors
  • Ding, Yanqing1
  • Wang, Huijun
  • Shen, Hong
  • Li, Zhuguo
  • Geng, Jian
  • Han, Huixia
  • Cai, Junjie
  • Li, Xin
  • Kang, Wei
  • Weng, Desheng
  • Lu, Yaodan
  • Wu, Dehua
  • He, Li
  • Yao, Kaitai
  • 1 Department of Pathology, Nan Fang Hospital, First Military Medical University, Guangzhou, Guangdong Province 510515, PR China. [email protected] , (China)
Type
Published Article
Journal
The Journal of Pathology
Publisher
Wiley
Publication Date
Jul 01, 2003
Volume
200
Issue
3
Pages
282–289
Identifiers
PMID: 12845623
Source
Medline
Language
English
License
Unknown

Abstract

In order to investigate the clinical pathology of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS), the autopsies of three patients who died from SARS in Nan Fang Hospital Guangdong, China were studied retrospectively. Routine haematoxylin and eosin (H&E) staining was used to study all of the tissues from the three cases. The lung tissue specimens were studied further with Macchiavello staining, viral inclusion body staining, reticulin staining, PAS staining, immunohistochemistry, ultrathin sectioning and staining, light microscopy, and transmission electron microscopy. The first symptom was hyperpyrexia in all three cases, followed by progressive dyspnoea and lung field shadowing. The pulmonary lesions included bilateral extensive consolidation, localized haemorrhage and necrosis, desquamative pulmonary alveolitis and bronchitis, proliferation and desquamation of alveolar epithelial cells, exudation of protein and monocytes, lymphocytes and plasma cells in alveoli, hyaline membrane formation, and viral inclusion bodies in alveolar epithelial cells. There was also massive necrosis of splenic lymphoid tissue and localized necrosis in lymph nodes. Systemic vasculitis included oedema, localized fibrinoid necrosis, and infiltration of monocytes, lymphocytes, and plasma cells into vessel walls in the heart, lung, liver, kidney, adrenal gland, and the stroma of striated muscles. Thrombosis was present in small veins. Systemic toxic changes included degeneration and necrosis of the parenchyma cells in the lung, liver, kidney, heart, and adrenal gland. Electron microscopy demonstrated clusters of viral particles, consistent with coronavirus, in lung tissue. SARS is a systemic disease that injures many organs. The lungs, immune organs, and systemic small vessels are the main targets of virus attack, so that extensive consolidation of the lung, diffuse alveolar damage with hyaline membrane formation, respiratory distress, and decreased immune function are the main causes of death. Copyright 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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