1. Histological Study of Lymphatic Nodules and their Distributions Throughout the Cecum of the Caspian Miniature Horse
- Author
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M. Rezaian, A. Saheb Jamei, and F. Ebrahimpoor
- Subjects
Lamina propria ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Muscularis mucosae ,General Veterinary ,Nodule (medicine) ,General Medicine ,Abdominal cavity ,Anatomy ,Haematoxylin ,Biology ,digestive system ,Cecum ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Lymphatic system ,chemistry ,Submucosa ,medicine ,medicine.symptom - Abstract
The cecum is a great cul-de sac intercalated between the small intestine and the colon. It has a remarkable size in the equine and digestion of more than 30% of total cellulose and production of volatile fatty acids by anaerobic metabolism of cellulose by its micro flora were made on it. It has also a substantial number of lymphatic nodules, which in horses are located near the apex. Topographically, cecum is situated chiefly to the right of the median plane and occupies around the whole volume of there in the abdominal cavity. The histological structure of the lymphatic follicles and their distributions pattern throughout the cecum in five healthy mature miniature horses (an special species of horses lives only in north of Iran) were studied (Fig. 1a). Each cecum was divided into three parts, namely, the base, body and apex, and samples were taken from each part immediately after slaughter and fixed with 10% buffered formalin. Routine histological laboratory techniques were made and 6 μm ?sections were cut and stained with haematoxylin and eosin staining and studied under light microscope. Lymphatic nodules were mostly found in the submucosa, but they disrupted the muscularis mucosa and merged into the lamina propria (Fig. 1c). The thickness of the mucosa and submucosa at these sites was smaller, and the epithelium that covered the mucosa was here modified into simple squamous or low cuboidal epithelia with dark and flattened nuclei (Figs 1b,d). The large and small lymphatic nodules were extensively accumulated in the apex, forming a nearly continuous layer in lamina propria and submucosa. However, they were less prominent at the base and least in the body of the cecum. (1 A) [ Abdominal viscera of miniature horse: right view. The right lateral wall is removed, right ventral part of colon (thick arrow), cecum (thin arrow). B: Photomicrograph from the apex of cecum in miniature horse, large numbers of lymphatic nodules were seen in lamina propria and sub mucosa (arrows) , H&E, 32x. C: Photomicrograph from the base of cecum in miniature horse, lymphatic nodule (thin arrow), discontinues muscularis mocusa (thick arrow), H&E, 100x. D: Photomicrograph from the epithelium covering the base of cecum in miniature horse, normalepithelia (thick arrow) ]
- Published
- 2005