1.Development of elastin layers in the aortic wall of human fetuses.
Seh Hoon SONG ; Hyong Woo PARK
Yonsei Medical Journal 1992;33(4):337-343
The presence of elastin layers in the aortic walls of twelve human fetuses was confirmed with scanning electron microscope pictures after hot alkali treatment and histochemical examination. In addition, the number of elastin layers in aortic walls of 5 different segments were compared in fetuses of varying ages. Aldehyde fuchsin stained slides of elastin ascending aortas showed a range between 27 and 55 layers of elastin in fetuses of 8 weeks to 32 weeks. However, in the lower abdominal aortas, elastin layers decreased from 28 to only 3 layers for fetuses of the same age. Furthermore, as elastin layers decreased from ascending aorta to abdominal aorta with the progression of fetal life, similar changes in the elastin lamellae were observed. These results suggest that while aortas grow rapidly in length, the medial elastin thickens slowly, perhaps due to slow development of hydrodynamic forces and pressures. Also the adventitial elastin appears to lose out gradually along the length from ascending aorta to abdominal aorta.
Aorta/*embryology/metabolism/ultrastructure
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Elastin/*metabolism
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Fetus/anatomy & histology/*metabolism/physiology
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Human
2.Three dimensional structures of pulmonary elastin; airway vs vascular elastin.
Yonsei Medical Journal 1994;35(4):475-483
Elastin is known to occur in the lung parenchyma and pleura as well as in the pulmonary vessels, but no detailed studies of this elastin's linkage between them have been done in three dimensions. For many years we have known that there is abundant elastin in the mammalian lungs, which may be associated with etiology of causing emphysema. We have developed selective casting methods to allow us to determine the location where elastin is found morphologically. The method involves casting either the vasculature via the right ventricle, or the airways via the trachea in the air sacs. Studies of the vasculature were done with the lung inflated to 80% of the vital capacity. The casted lungs were then put in 0.1 N NaOH at 75 degrees C for 48 hours, turning them frequently. THis method removed all non-elastin tissues. The scanning electron microscopy (SEM) was used to reveal the three dimensional pictures of elastin structures from both lung parenchyma and pulmonary vessels. Elastin was seen as fenestrated sheets and some fibers in both the vessels and the airways. Elastin in the two different locations was often interconnected. Studies on 6 dogs, 8 rabbits, and 2 pigs showed no significant species difference at the level of resolution of the SEM, which was used to study the specimens after they had been freeze-dried.
Animal
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Blood Vessels/metabolism/ultrastructure
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Corrosion Casting
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Dogs
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Elastin/*ultrastructure
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Lung/blood supply/*metabolism
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Microscopy, Electron, Scanning
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Pulmonary Alveoli/metabolism/ultrastructure
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Rabbits
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Swine