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XIX.—The Female Reproductive System in the Guinea-Pig: Intravitam Staining; Fat Production; Influence of Hormones

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 July 2012

Thomas Nicol
Affiliation:
Senior Lecturer in Anatomy, University of Glasgow.

Extract

This research was begun in 1929, and a preliminary account of some of the results of the investigation was published in the Journal of Anatomy, January 1932. It was initiated by the discovery, during experiments on intravitam staining in the guinea-pig, that dye-bearing cells collected in large numbers in the endometrium of the uterus and that their incidence there was cyclic. The first results were obtained in animals injected immediately after parturition and killed at intervals thereafter. In a short series of virgin animals, the series being established by determining the date of heat by the vaginal smear method (Stockard and Papanicolaou, 1917, 1919), practically identical results were obtained.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1935

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References

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