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  2. Intestinal gland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intestinal_gland

    The intestinal glands in the colon are often referred to as colonic crypts. The epithelial inner surface of the colon is punctuated by invaginations, the colonic crypts. The colon crypts are shaped like microscopic thick-walled test tubes with a central hole down the length of the tube (the crypt lumen). Four tissue sections are shown here, two ...

  3. Aberrant crypt foci - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aberrant_crypt_foci

    Aberrant crypt foci (ACF) are clusters of abnormal tube-like glands in the lining of the colon and rectum. Aberrant crypt foci form before colorectal polyps and are one of the earliest changes seen in the colon that may lead to cancer. ACF are, as opposed to normal epithelial cells, apoptosis resistant. When looking for aberrant crypt foci with ...

  4. Johann Nathanael Lieberkühn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johann_Nathanael_Lieberkühn

    The Crypts of Lieberkühn (intestinal glands) are named for him; he first described these in detail in De fabrica et actione vollorum intestinorum tenuium hominis, in 1745. Beyond this, Lieberkühn produced optical instruments such as compass microscopes with Lieberkühn reflector , further developing the light microscope , which he had seen ...

  5. Paneth cell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paneth_cell

    Like the other epithelial cell lineages in the small intestine, Paneth cells originate at the stem cell region near the bottom of the gland. [4] There are on average 5–12 Paneth cells in each small intestinal crypt. [5] Unlike the other epithelial cell types, Paneth cells migrate downward from the stem cell region and settle just adjacent to ...

  6. Crypt (anatomy) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crypt_(anatomy)

    Crypts are anatomical structures that are narrow but deep invaginations into a larger structure. One common type of anatomical crypt is the Crypts of Lieberkühn. [1] However, it is not the only type: some types of tonsils also have crypts. Because these crypts allow external access to the deep portions of the tonsils, these tonsils are more ...

  7. Colorectal adenoma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colorectal_adenoma

    Normal (left) versus dysplastic (large at right) colonic crypts, the latter conferring a diagnosis of a tubular and/or villous adenoma. Histopathology of high-grade dysplasia in a tubulovillous adenoma, in this case seen mainly as loss of cell polarity, as cells become more plump and haphazard than the elongated and parallel nuclei of ...

  8. List of intestinal stem cell marker genes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_intestinal_stem...

    In the adult intestine, the crypts of Lieberkühn are the niche for epithelial stem cells and contain all proliferative stem and progenitor cells. Differentiating cells exit the cell cycle and migrate out of the crypts and onto the surface epithelium of the intestine, where they perform their physiological role (e.g., nutrient absorption by enterocytes; mucous secretion by goblet cells) and ...

  9. Sessile serrated lesion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sessile_serrated_lesion

    A sessile serrated lesion (SSL) is a premalignant flat (or sessile) lesion of the colon, predominantly seen in the cecum and ascending colon. SSLs are thought to lead to colorectal cancer through the (alternate) serrated pathway. [1] [2] This differs from most colorectal cancer, which arises from mutations starting with inactivation of the APC ...

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