|
11. |
Distinct types of encapsulated sensory corpuscles in the oral mucosa of the dog: Immunohistochemical and electron microscopic studies |
|
The Anatomical Record,
Volume 217,
Issue 1,
1987,
Page 90-98
T. Tachibana,
K. Ishizeki,
Y. Sakakura,
Preview
|
PDF (1400KB)
|
|
摘要:
AbstractThe types, structure, and distribution of encapsulated sensory endings that have lamellar investments in the oral mucosa and vermilion border of the lip of adult dogs were studied by light and electron microscopy. Immunohistochemistry for cholinesterase was used to identify the corpuscules by light microscopy. Two different types of corpuscular end‐organs containing definite inner cores were distinguished. One was a typical, simple corpuscle, which contains only one, but sometimes two, inner cores composed of densely piled cytoplasmic lamellae surrounding a central axon terminal. The other type was characterized by the coexistence of convoluted inner cores, arborized free endings, and thin nerve bundles within a perineural capsule; we term this type “compound corpuscle.” The ultrastructure of the inner cores in compound corpuscles was similar to that of mature, simple corpuscles. The arborized free endings in the compound corpuscles usually contained an accumulation of mitochondria and small clear vesicles. The compound corpuscles were frequently encountered in the vermilion border of the lip and in the labial and buccal mucosae but were rare in the masticatory mucosa of the gingiva and hard palate. From the results, it was concluded that the compound corpuscle is a distinct type of the sensory end‐organ containing inne
ISSN:0003-276X
DOI:10.1002/ar.1092170112
出版商:Wiley Subscription Services, Inc., A Wiley Company
年代:1987
数据来源: WILEY
|
12. |
Rare case of the inferior mesenteric artery arising from the superior mesenteric artery |
|
The Anatomical Record,
Volume 217,
Issue 1,
1987,
Page 99-102
Seiichiro Kitamura,
Takahiko Nishiguchi,
Akira Sakai,
Kenzo Kumamoto,
Preview
|
PDF (387KB)
|
|
摘要:
AbstractThe authors observed a variation of the inferior mesenteric artery, which arose from the superior mesenteric artery, in a 69‐year‐old Japanese male cadaver during dissection in 1984. In this case, no rudiment of the ordinary inferior mesenteric artery could be found on the abdominal aorta. There are few reports of this variation, and an extensive search of the available literature revealed only four cases, including two in Japan. Such a variation had been somewhat inadequately described as an “absence of the inferior mesenteric artery” in the previous reports, but we avoided this terminology, because all of the cases possessed an artery, which, though arising from the superior mesenteric artery instead of the abdominal aorta, had the same branches as a normal inferior mesenteric artery. Consistent with findings observed in the previous cases, the unusual inferior mesenteric artery arose as the first branch of the superior mesenteric artery, with the common trunk of both mesenteric arteries originating from the abdominal aorta at a level at which an ordinary superior mesenteric artery would arise. It is for this reason that we did not adopt another acceptable name, that is, “the common mesenteric artery,” for this variation. The variation can be explained as the result of an unusual development of the embryonic artery system, which comprises a number of ventral splanchnic arteries interconnected by longitudinal anastomotic channels to supply the primitive dig
ISSN:0003-276X
DOI:10.1002/ar.1092170113
出版商:Wiley Subscription Services, Inc., A Wiley Company
年代:1987
数据来源: WILEY
|
13. |
Masthead |
|
The Anatomical Record,
Volume 217,
Issue 1,
1987,
Page -
Preview
|
PDF (126KB)
|
|
ISSN:0003-276X
DOI:10.1002/ar.1092170101
出版商:Wiley Subscription Services, Inc., A Wiley Company
年代:1987
数据来源: WILEY
|
|