Histologic Features of the Dolphin Liver: Normal Anatomy and Criteria for Diagnosis
Department of Pathology, University of Texas Medical Branch and
Department of Marine Biology, Texas A&M University at Galveston, Galveston, TX, USA; Texas
Marine Mammal Stranding Network
Abstract
Examination of the liver from many individuals representing 11 species of
dolphin, including free-ranging fisheries by-catch and strandings from California, Texas and
other locations, and scattered individuals dying in marine aquaria, as well as review of
published articles, reveals common histologic and pathologic features and several problems
relating to diagnosis. The purpose of this presentation is describe normal features and to offer
suggestions for criteria for diagnosis.
The dolphin liver has several unusual features, probably reflecting
adaptation to diving, that should be recognized as they may be a source of confusion in
attempting diagnosis. These are unusually thick walls of arteries in the triads, which may be in
spasm, other sphincter-like thickening of vascular walls; unusual prominence of centrilobular
sinusoids, and cytoplasmic secretion vacuoles. The significance of these vacuoles is not clear,
but their ubiquitous distribution strongly suggests that they are physiologic and not
pathologic.
Infiltration of lobules and triads by lymphocytes and occasionally plasma
cells is common, but does not necessarily indicate 'hepatitis' in the usual sense. Infiltrates
may reflect events in the intestine, and not hepatic disease. Criteria supporting a diagnosis of
hepatitis include finding of necrotic hepatocytes (acidophilic bodies or Councilman bodies),
and/or disruption of the limiting plate (interface necrosis or piecemeal necrosis) associated
with inflammatory infiltrates.
Triads normally contain little connective tissue, and any increase indicates
fibrosis. Fibrosis may be graded over a four-point scale, from none, through mild, moderate, to
severe. 'Mild' indicates portal expansion by fibrous tissue, 'moderate' indicates tracking of
fibrosis into lobules with occasional bridging of portal areas, and 'severe' is widespread
bridging, with formation of nodules. The diagnosis of cirrhosis requires bridging fibrosis and
nodular hepatocellular regeneration.
Parasitic infestation of the biliary tract may result in cholangitis,
involving the portal areas, or may produce periductal fibrosis and epithelial proliferation of
the larger bile passages. Evaluation of liver histology should include a routine stain, such as
H&E, a connective tissue stain, such as Masson's trichrome, a stain for iron, a reticulin
stain for evaluation of hepatic plate architecture, and PAS for cytoplasmic inclusions in
hepatocytes and Kupffer cells.