IMPLANTATION OF MOUSE EGGS IN THE PERITONEAL CAVITY
- 1 December 1963
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Bioscientifica in Reproduction
- Vol. 6 (3) , 385-+
- https://doi.org/10.1530/jrf.0.0060385
Abstract
When blastocysts lacking zonae pellucidae were transferred to the reproductive tract of female mice, several implications were subsequently found outside the tract, in the peritoneal cavity. These were presumably derived from blastocysts which had escaped from the reproductive tract. Eggs with and without zonae pellucidae were then injected directly into the peritoneal cavity: the incidence of implantation was low, and did not lend any support to the hypothesis that absence of the zona pellucida might facilitate extra-uterine implantation. In all, eight intraperitoneal implantations were found. Two contained recognizable embryonic structures, of which one closely resembled a normal 8- to 8 1/2-day embryo.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- DEVELOPMENT OF THE MOUSE BLASTOCYST TRANSPLANTED TO THE SPLEENReproduction, 1963
- DEVELOPMENT OF MOUSE BLASTOCYSTS TRANSPLANTED TO SCROTAL AND CRYPTORCHID TESTIS1963
- Inter-specific Transfers of Eggs Between Rat and MouseDevelopment, 1962
- The Influence of the Uterine Environment on the Development of Mouse EggsDevelopment, 1962
- The incidence of experimentally produced abdominal implantations in the ratThe Anatomical Record, 1961
- The development of mouse ova under the capsule of the kidneyThe Anatomical Record, 1950
- The development of mouse ova in the anterior chamber of the eye and in the abdominal cavityJournal of Anatomy, 1947
- Experiments on developing rats. I. Limits of foetal regeneration; behavior of embryonic material in abnormal environmentsThe Anatomical Record, 1934
- Abdominal pregnancy in animals, with an account of a case of multiple ectopic gestation in a rabbit1932