Intermediate trophoblast

Intermediate trophoblast is a distinct subtype of trophoblastic tissue that arises from the cytotrophoblast.[1]

Micrograph showing intermediate trophoblasts. H&E stain.
Implantation site intermediate trophoblast. Low molecular weight cytokeratin stain.

It is sub-categorized by location:[1]

  • Villous intermediate trophoblast:
    • at anchoring villi of trophoblastic column
  • Implantation site intermediate trophoblast:
    • at implantation site (or basal plate), differentiated from villous intermediate trophoblast
  • Chorionic-type intermediate trophoblast
    • at chorionic laeve of fetal membrane, differentiated from villous intermediate trophoblast

Function edit

The function of the implantation site intermediate trophoblast is to anchor the placenta to the maternal tissue.

Histomorphology edit

  • Villous intermediate trophoblast[1]
    • polyhedral and uniform nuclei
    • prominent cell border; abundant eosinophilic to clear cytoplasm
    • cohesive growth
  • Implantation site intermediate trophoblast[1]
    • pleomorphic irregular nuclei, large and hyperchromatic, may show multinucleation
    • abundant eosinophilic to amphophilic cytoplasm
    • infiltrative growth (splitting muscle, replacing vascular wall ...etc)
  • Chorionic-type intermediate trophoblast[1]
    • round to polyhedral nuclei, may multinucleation
    • abundant eosinophilic to clear cytoplasm
    • cohesive growth

Pathology edit

Intermediate trophoblasts are thought to be the cell of origin for:[1]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Shih IM, Kurman RJ (January 2001). "The pathology of intermediate trophoblastic tumors and tumor-like lesions". Int. J. Gynecol. Pathol. 20 (1): 31–47. doi:10.1097/00004347-200101000-00004. PMID 11192071.