Abstract
Several theories have been postulated regarding the origin of ovarian teratomas, including incomplete twinning, neoplastic proliferation of sequestered totipotent blastomeres or primordial cells, derepression of totipotent genetic information in the nuclei of somatic cells, and parthenogenetic development of germ cells. At present parthenogenetic development of ova is the most widely accepted theory, primarily because of the presence of a 46 XX karyotype in almost all mature teratomas. However, some authors have raised the possibility of fusion of ova in the mechanism of formation of ovarian teratomas. We report the results of a study on ovarian tissue adjacent to 31 teratomas to assess the frequency of biovularity, which could provide evidence favoring the last theory. On the whole we found biovularity in 26 ovaries of young patients (mean age, 27 years) with variable numbers of biovular follicles ranging from t in 4 cases to more than 10 in 2 cases; the number of biovular follicles depended on the quantity of ovarian tissue examined as well as on the total number of ova in the tissue. In multiple occasions 2 ova were included within a single follicle; in 24 ovaries the biovularity was correlated with coalescence of primary follicles characterized morphologically by an ovoid or hourglass-like shape that resulted from cohesion of 2 follicles. As control cases, 30 ovaries of patients with an average age of 28 years were examined (12 removed for endometriosis, 8 for serous cystadenoma, 7 for tubal pregnancy, and 3 for acute salpingo-oophoritis). Only 1 ovary with endometriosis contained a single biovular follicle. The results suggest that ovarian teratoma development may result from fusion of ova in ovaries containing biovularity and phenomena of coalescence of primary follicles.
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