ISSN:
0362-2525
Keywords:
Life and Medical Sciences
;
Cell & Developmental Biology
Source:
Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
Topics:
Biology
,
Medicine
Notes:
The brain-microvascular architecture of the newt (Triturus cristatus carnifex) was studied by scanning electron-microscopical examination of microvascular corrosion casts. It is characterized at the leptomeningeal level by a superficial network of single vessels that leave the meningeal sheath to form hairpin-shaped capillary loops. These loops penetrate the nervous parenchyma to varying depths and are variously bent, inclined, and twisted. Each hairpin-like loop consists of descending and ascending limbs connected by a distal U-shaped segment. The limbs are of equal diameter and lack physical differentiation. Some loops branch in a secondary loop, but there are no intraparenchymal connections with analogous surrounding structures. On vascular casts we observed detailed imprints of endothelial cell nuclei. This microvascular architecture is present in the whole brain except in leptomeninx and choroidal plexuses. The vascular pattern of T. cristatus carnifex resembles that of apodans. However, it differs from the anuran condition, which is characterized by a three-dimensional parenchymal network and from that of Ambystoma mexicanum which displays an intermediate condition between a single-capillary network and a capillary-loop model. At the level of paired capillaries, a counter-current exchange system may occur between the two limbs of the same loop, an arrangement that could promote uniformity of extracellular fluid composition in parenchyma.
Additional Material:
10 Ill.
Type of Medium:
Electronic Resource
URL:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jmor.1052100304
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