Macrophages are important in inflammatory processes in heart
disease and in transplantation rejection. A
resurgence of interest in the macrophage has emanated from recent
evidence implicating it as an effector cell
in atherosclerosis and transplantation rejection. The detailed distribution
of the macrophage within the
normal human heart is unknown. We quantified macrophage numbers in the
different chambers of the heart. Large tissue blocks
(1.5–2.0 cm3) were removed from specific sites in 5
‘normal’ control hearts (2 males, 3
females, age range 19–46 y). Paraffin-embedded sections were stained
with a CD68 pan macrophage marker.
Positive cells were enumerated within 20 random fields. Results were analysed
using a generalised linear
modelling method using the Poisson distribution. Macrophages were identified
within septa, and often close
to blood vessels, in the myocardium, and in the majority of areas in all
hearts. Macrophage numbers varied
significantly between areas (range 0–6 cells/high power field;
P<0.001), and between the 5 hearts analysed
(P<0.001). In general, there were significantly more macrophages
in the ventricles (RV P<0.01, LV P<0.05), but
these differences were affected by heart differences. This study provides
a baseline for the range of
macrophage numbers within normal hearts, thus enabling comparisons with
macrophage numbers within diseased and transplanted hearts.