Gynaecology for students and practitioners . Fig. 11. Normal Endometriubi of a Parous Woman (low power). The glands are numerous, fairly regular in outline, and some are slightly dilated. The deepest parts penetrate the muscular layer of the uterine wall. which make up this membrane are (1) epithelium (surface and glandu-lar) ; (2) stroma or interstitial tissue ; (3) blood-vessels and Fig. 12. The Glands of the Corporeal Endometrium (high power). Nerve-endings cannot be demonstrated by our present methods ofstaining. The epithelium of the corporeal endometrium consists of a single
Gynaecology for students and practitioners . Fig. 11. Normal Endometriubi of a Parous Woman (low power). The glands are numerous, fairly regular in outline, and some are slightly dilated. The deepest parts penetrate the muscular layer of the uterine wall. which make up this membrane are (1) epithelium (surface and glandu-lar) ; (2) stroma or interstitial tissue ; (3) blood-vessels and Fig. 12. The Glands of the Corporeal Endometrium (high power). Nerve-endings cannot be demonstrated by our present methods ofstaining. The epithelium of the corporeal endometrium consists of a single 2 18 GYNAECOLOGY layer of columnar ciliated cells resting on a basement cilia are said to appear^first at puberty and disappear at theclimacteric. They are seldom well indicated in pathological surface epithelium is invaginated at certain points, and theseinvaginations extend through the whole depth of the stroma andoften into the superficial muscular strata. They form the glandsof the corporeal endometrium. Their cells are df moderate height, and the nuclei are unequally placed,being sometimes in the centre andsometimes in the basal third of thecell (see Fig. 12). They thereforediffer from those of the cervicalglands, where the cells are higher andthe nuclei lie only at the base {seeFig. 14). The glands are simple tubularstructures, vertical in their super-fic
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectgynecology, bookyear1