Scanning electron microscope study of the development of the human respiratory acinus.
- 1 October 1984
- Vol. 39 (10) , 733-742
- https://doi.org/10.1136/thx.39.10.733
Abstract
Plastic corrosion casts were made of lungs from fetuses aged from 19 wk gestation to term and of lungs from a child and 2 adults to study the development of the respiratory acinus. To achieve reliable infusion of the most peripheral airspaces a high viscosity plastic was used that is not known to have been employed previously for corrosion casting of lungs. The casts were examined in the scanning electron microscope and showed the increase both in number and in length of the airways distal to the terminal bronchiole and also the change in shape and complexity of the most peripheral airspaces as the lung matures. The terminal airspaces change from short, simple, tubular endings at 19 wk gestation to short, shallow saccules from around 30 wk gestation to full term and contrast with the deep cup shaped alveoli in the adult. Measurements of the size of the terminal airspace at various stages of development are presented. This new approach, allowing 3-dimensional study of the peripheral airspaces of the developing lung, will be useful for investigating the lung pathology of neonates.This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Fetal and childhood development of the intrapulmonary veins in man--branching pattern and structureThorax, 1973
- Pulmonary arterial development during childhood: branching pattern and structureThorax, 1973
- Intra-pulmonary arterial development during fetal life-branching pattern and structure.1972
- The structure of compressed lungs in congenital diaphragmatic herniaJournal of Anatomy, 1972
- The structure of the pulmonary acinus in a child of six years and eight monthsJournal of Anatomy, 1971
- Models of the human bronchial tree.Journal of Applied Physiology, 1971
- Growth of the alveoli and pulmonary arteries in childhoodThorax, 1970
- The pattern of the terminal air spaces in a premature infant of 30–32 weeks that lived nineteen and a quarter hoursJournal of Anatomy, 1969
- Notes on the development of the lung in infancy and early childhoodJournal of Anatomy, 1967
- THE CHANGING PATTERNS IN THE DEVELOPING LUNGS OF INFANTSCells Tissues Organs, 1965