Evaluation of glycogen content in some bengin,dysplastic and malignant oral lesions with PAS staining in patients reffered to Tabriz dentistry faculty between 2009-2019
Abstract
Introduction
Oral cancer is a major cancer and although diagnostic techniques have
improved during years, survival rates are still low (1). When cancer is
diagnosed early, all forms of treatment show best performance (5). The aim of
this study was to analyze and compare the glycogen content in dysplastic
epithelium and invasive carcinoma along with other pathological conditions and
normal Oral epithelium to determine whether the glycogenic content is an
important marker in the histological evaluation of epithelial dysplasia.
Materials and methods
In this cross-sectional retrospective research, paraffin blocks related to patients
diagnosed with lichen planus (17), epithelial dysplasia (7), Verrucous
carcinoma (7) and SCC (12) were examined by PAS staining. The results were
reported as number (percentage) or mean standard deviation for qualitative and
quantitative variables respectively. One way ANOVA was used to compare the
glycogen levels in the groups if the data were normal and the non-parametric
equivalent of the Kruskal-Wallis test was used if the data were abnormal. SPSS
version 17 was used to analyze the data and a significance level of p <0.05 was
considered.
Results
In our study, samples of lichen planus (29.8%), dysplasia (12.4%), Verrucous
carcinoma (12.3%), SCC (21.1%) and normal tissue (24.6%) were studied as
control group and the overall results are:
The mean of glycogen variable in the group of keratotic and benign lesions was
higher than the mean in the group of malignant lesions (P-value <0.05).
The mean of glycogen variable in the group of keratotic and benign lesions was
lower than the mean in the control group (P-value <0.05).
B
The mean of glycogen variable in the malignant lesion group was lower than the
mean in the control group (P-value <0.01).
Conclusion
In our study, the amount of glycogen in malignant lesions was significantly
lower than in the control group because benign and precancerous epithelial cells
consume greater amounts of energy due to increased proliferation and therefore
deplete their glycogen sources that lead to a negative reaction with PAS
staining.