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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2013 Sep 19.
Published in final edited form as: Toxicol Pathol. 2013 Feb 20;41(7):1016–1027. doi: 10.1177/0192623313477754

Figure 1.

Figure 1

Representative cervical histology, hematoxylin & eosin. (A) Case 12: Normal rhesus cervix, 4×. The junction between the endo- and ectocervix is indicated (arrow). (B) Case 13: Rhesus ectocervix containing prominent submucosal lymphoid aggregates (arrows), 4×. (C) Case 1: Cervical squamous metaplasia and dysplasia, 4×. Dysplastic keratinocytes are large and bizarre (inset). (D) Case 4: Suppurative cervicitis with dysplastic polyp, 4×. The polyp contains dysplastic, stratified epithelial cells (inset) supported by a fibrovascular core. Small aggregates of neutrophils are present in the cervical lumen. (E) Case 7: Anaplastic carcinoma, 2×. The poorly demarcated, unencapsulated neoplasm is comprised of sheets of pleiomorphic to polygonal cells (inset) with islands of necrosis and hemorrhage (arrows). (F) Case 8: Papillary carcinoma in a cotton top tamarin, 2×. Neoplastic epithelial cells (inset) are arranged in papillary fronds.