Arias-Stella reaction, also Arias-Stella phenomenon, is a benign change in the endometrium associated with the presence of chorionic tissue.[1]

Micrograph showing Arias-Stella reaction in endometrium

Arias-Stella reaction is due to progesterone primarily. Cytologically, it looks like a malignancy and, historically, it was diagnosed as endometrial cancer.[1]

Significance edit

It is significant only because it can be misdiagnosed as a cancer. It may be seen in a completely normal pregnancy.

Diagnosis edit

It is characterized by nuclear enlargement and may also have any of the following: an irregular nuclear membrane, granular chromatin, centronuclear vacuolization, and pseudonuclear inclusions.[1]

Five subtypes are recognized:[1]

  1. Minimal atypia.
  2. Early secretory pattern.
  3. Secretory or hypersecretory pattern.
  4. Regenerative, proliferative or nonsecretory pattern.
  5. Monstrous cell pattern.

History edit

It was first described by Javier Arias Stella, a Peruvian pathologist, in 1954.[2]

See also edit

Molar ectopic

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Arias-Stella, J. (Jan 2002). "The Arias-Stella reaction: facts and fancies four decades after". Adv Anat Pathol. 9 (1): 12–23. doi:10.1097/00125480-200201000-00003. PMID 11756756. S2CID 26249687.
  2. ^ Arias-Stella, J. (Aug 1954). "Atypical endometrial changes associated with the presence of chorionic tissue". Arch Pathol. 58 (2): 112–28. PMID 13170908.

Bibliography edit