Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-g7gxr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-09T07:14:01.115Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

XVI.—Vascular Architecture of the Rat Uterus*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 June 2012

Archibald Young
Affiliation:
Department of Anatomy, University of Glasgow.
Get access

Synopsis

The form and structure of the uterus of the albino laboratory rat are described. Cyclical vascular changes are noted, and attention is drawn to the presence of spiral arteries in the endometrium. A common lower cervical canal is described.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1951

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

References to Literature

Bacsich, P., and Wyburn, G. M., 1940. “Cyclic variations in the vascular architecture of the uterus of the guinea-pig”, Trans. Roy. Soc. Edin., LX, Part I, No. 2.Google Scholar
Bacsich, P., and Wyburn, G. M., 1941. “Hormonal analysis of the cyclic variations in the vascular architecture of the guinea-pig”, Trans. Roy. Soc. Edin., LX, Part II, No. 13.Google Scholar
Daron, G. H., 1936. “The arterial pattern of the Tunica Mucosa of the uterus in Macacus Rhesus”, Amer. Journ. Anat., LXVIII, 349.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Doherty, M. M., Suh, T. H., and Alexander, L., 1938. “New modifications of the Benzidine Stain for study of the vascular pattern of the central nervous system”, Archiv. Neurol. Psychiat., XL, 158.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fagin, J., and Reynolds, S. R. M., 1936. “The endometrial vascular bed in relation to rhythmic uterine contractility, with a consideration of the functions of the intermittent contractions of œstrus”, Amer. Journ. Physiol., CXVII, 86.Google Scholar
Gillman, J., 1941. “Profound vascular changes induced in the uterus of the castrated rabbit by combinations of œstradiol benzoate and progesterone”, Endocrinology, xxix, 336.Google Scholar
Greene, E. C., 1935. “Anatomy of the rat”, Trans. Amer. Phil. Soc., No. 27, Philadelphia.Google Scholar
Harne, O. G., 1932. “Study of excised uterus of rat: volume displacement and irritability to Pituitrin, with reference to the œstrual cycle”, Amer. Journ. Physiol., C, 331.Google Scholar
Howell, A. B., 1926. “Anatomy of the Wood Rat”, Monograph of the Amer. Soc. Mammologists.Google Scholar
Hunt, H., 1924. Laboratory Manual of the Anatomy of the Rat. The Macmillan Coy., New York.Google Scholar
Kaiser, I. H., 1947 a. “Histological appearance of coiled arterioles in the endometrium of Rhesus monkey, baboon, chimpanzee and gibbon”, Anat. Rec., XCIX, 199.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kaiser, I. H., 1947 b. “Absence of coiled arterioles in the endometrium of menstruating New World monkeys”, Anat. Rec., XCIX, 353.Google Scholar
Kaiser, I. H., 1948. “Newer concepts of menstruation”, Amer. Journ. Obstet. Gynec., LVI, 1037.Google Scholar
Kniseley, , 1934. “Microscopic observations on circulatory systems of living, transilluminated mammalian spleens and parturient uteri”, Proc. Soc. Exper. Biol. Med., XXXII, 212.Google Scholar
Long, J. A., and Evans, H. M., 1922. “The œstrous cycle in the rat and its associated phenomena”, Mem. Univ. Calif., VI, 148.Google Scholar
Markee, J. E., 1929. “Rhythmic variations in the vascularity of the uterus of guinea-pig during œstrous cycle”, Amer. Journ. Obstet. Gynec., XVII., 205.Google Scholar
Markee, J. E., 1932. “Rhythmic vascular uterine changes”, Amer. Journ. Physiol., c, 32.Google Scholar
Monie, I. W., and Sigurdson, L. A., 1950. “A proposed classification for uterine and vaginal anomalies”, Amer. Journ. Obstet. Gynec., LIX, NO. 3, p. 696.Google Scholar
Mossman, H. W., 1937. “Comparative morphogenesis of the fœtal membranes and accessory uterine structures”, Contr. Embryol. Carnegie Inst. Wash., XXVI, No. 158, p. 129.Google Scholar
Pickworth, F. A., 1934. “A new method of study of the brain capillaries and its application to the regional localisation of mental disorder”, Journ. Anat., LXIX, Part I, p. 62.Google Scholar
Ramsey, E. M., 1949. “The vascular pattern of the endometrium of the pregnant Rhesus monkey (Macaca mulatto)”, Contr. Embryol. Carnegie Inst. Wash., XXXIII, 219.Google Scholar
Reynolds, S. R. M., 1949. Physiology of Uterus, 2nd Ed., Paul B. Hoeber Inc., N.Y.Google Scholar
Reynolds, S. R. M., 1950. “Problems in uterine physiology and their interrelations”, Fertility and Sterility, 1, No. 4, p. 306.Google Scholar
Rossman, I., 1937. “Uterine contractions and the transport of sperm in the rat”, Anat. Rec., LXIX, 133.Google Scholar
Selye, and McKeown, , 1935. “Studies on the physiology of the maternal placenta in the rat”, Proc Roy. Soc. London, Ser. B, CXIX, 1.Google Scholar
Williams, M. F., 1948. “The vascular architecture of the rat uterus as in-fluenced by œstrogen and progesterone”, Amer. Journ. Anat., LXXXIII, 247.Google Scholar