Biol Reprod Keystone Symposia Conference on Frontiers in Reproductive Biology & Regulation of Fertility.
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Biology of Reproduction, Vol 28, 735-744, Copyright © 1983 by Society for the Study of Reproduction


ARTICLES

Exposure to diethylstilbestrol during pregnancy permanently alters the ovary and oviduct

RR Newbold, BC Bullock and JA Mc Lachlan

To determine the effects of transplacental exposure to diethylstilbestrol (DES) on the ovary and oviduct of the CD-1 mouse, timed pregnant mice were injected subcutaneously with DES (100 micrograms/kg) on Days 9 through 16 of gestation and female offspring sacrificed from 4 weeks to 10 months of age. Following DES exposure, ovarian alterations such as inflammation, a prominent interstitial compartment composed of medullary tubule-like structures, and intra- and para-ovarian cysts from mesonephric remnants were observed. In addition, there were oviductal abnormalities including malformation. As reported previously, the oviduct was closely adherent and coiled around the ovary in a similar position to that seen in the fetal mouse. This malformation was termed developmental arrest of the oviduct (DAO) and was a consistent finding in female offspring exposed prenatally to DES (100 micrograms/kg). Increased prevalence of salpingitis and microscopic alterations in the oviduct were also observed. Oviductal epithelium was mostly secretory type with basal vacuoles. In some cases, oviductal epithelium was hyperplastic and formed mucosal folds resembling glands which extended through the muscularis (diverticulosis). The extent of the adenomatous mucosal folds and the degree of extension through the muscularis increased with the age of the animal (100% at 10 months). Some characteristics of this abnormality resembled salpingitis isthmica nodosa, a lesion described in women which is associated with ectopic pregnancies and subfertility. Gross and microscopic changes in the oviduct were more consistent than were the changes among other portions of the reproductive tract of DES- treated mice previously reported. Since subfertility has been described in this mouse model as well as in prenatally DES-exposed women, the data presented in this report may help in evaluation of the reported reduced fertility in exposed patients as well as other infertility patients.


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Copyright © 1983 by the Society for the Study of Reproduction.