Use este identificador para citar ou linkar para este item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/16342
Título: Placentation in the Amazonian manatee (Trichechus inunguis)
Autor: Carter, Anthony M.
Miglino, Maria Angelica
Ambrósio, Carlos Eduardo
dos Santos, Tatiana Carlesco
Weber Rosas, Fernando Cesar
D'Affonsêca Neto, José Anselmo
Lazzarini, Stella Maris
Carvalho, Ana Flávia de
Silva, Vera Maria Ferreira da
Palavras-chave: Animals Cell
Animals Tissue
Blood Vessel
Cell Ultrastructure
Columnar Epithelium
Controlled Study
Cytotrophoblast
Female
Fetus Circulation
Fetus Membrane
Histopathology
Immunohistochemistry
Inner Ear
Nonhuman
Phylogeny
Placental Delivery
Reproduction
Microscopy, Electron, Scanning
Trichechus Inunguis
Trophoblast
Umbilical Cord
Vascularization
Afrotheria
Elephantidae
Sirenia
Trichechus Inunguis
Data do documento: 2008
Revista: Reproduction, Fertility and Development
É parte de: Volume 20, Número 4, Pags. 537-545
Abstract: Evidence from several sources supports a close phylogenetic relationship between elephants and sirenians. To explore whether this was reflected in similar placentation, we examined eight delivered placentae from the Amazonian manatee using light microscopy and immunohistochemistry. In addition, the fetal placental circulation was described by scanning electron microscopy of vessel casts. The manatee placenta was zonary and endotheliochorial, like that of the elephant. The interhaemal barrier comprised maternal endothelium, cytotrophoblasts and fetal endothelium. We found columnar trophoblast beneath the chorionic plate and lining lacunae in this region, but there was no trace in the term placenta of haemophagous activity. The gross anatomy of the cord and fetal membranes was consistent with previous descriptions and included a four-chambered allantoic sac, as also found in the elephant and other afrotherians. Connective tissue septae descended from the chorionic plate and carried blood vessels to the labyrinth, where they gave rise to a dense capillary network. This appeared to drain into shorter vessels near the chorionic plate. The maternal vasculature could not be examined in the same detail, but maternal capillaries ran rather straight and roughly parallel to the fetal ones. Overall, there is a close resemblance in placentation between the manatee and the elephant. © CSIRO 2008.
DOI: 10.1071/RD08009
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