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. 2017 Jan 30;8:104. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2017.00104

Table 2.

Comparison of histopathological characteristics of SFTSV models and patients.

Model Time to death Lymph node Spleen Bone marrow Liver Kidney Reference
C57BL/6 IFNAR-/- 5–7 days Histiocytic necrotizing lymphadenitis Histiocytic necrotizing lymphadenitis Increasing the myeloid/erythroid ratio Diffuse infiltration by inflammatory cells Antigen-positive large mononuclear cells Tani et al., 2015, Present study
Loss of lymphoid follicles in the cortex Loss of white pulp Moderate necrosis collocating with edema and fibrin Focal necrosis with slight inflammatory cell infiltration
Antigen-positive swollen Kupffer cells
129/Sv IFNAR-/- 2–3 days Antigen-positive mononuclear cells Not significant Liu et al., 2014; Shimada et al., 2015; Hayasaka et al., 2016
C57BL/6 Marked increase in megakaryocytes Significantly increased megakaryocytes Ballooning degeneration of hepatocytes Glomerular hypercellularity Jin et al., 2012; Liu et al., 2014
Decreased lymphocyte cellularity in the red pulp Scattered necrosis Mesangial thickening
Multifocal pyknosis, karyorrhexis, and karyokysis Congestion in Bowman’s space
Newborn 7–13 days Large necrotic areas Chen et al., 2012
Large amount of mononuclear cells
Rhesus macaque Multiple scattered loci with hepatocyte necrosis Glomerular hypercellularity Jin et al., 2015
Mesangial thickening
Congestion in Bowman’s space
Human (fatalities) Necrotizing lymphadenitis with extensive necrosis Prominent hemophagocytosis Prominent hemophagocytosis Mild microvesicular fatty changes Subepithelial hemorrhage within the renal pelvis Hiraki et al., 2014; Takahashi et al., 2014; Kim et al., 2016
Infitration by histiocytes and immunoblasts Histiocytic hypocellular Inflammation of lymphocytes and macrophages
Prominent hemophagocytosis Globular necroses and mild portal fibrosis