THE CAROTID BODY: A PATHOLOGIST'S VIEW.
- 19 June 1965
- journal article
- Vol. 92 (25) , 1298-302
Abstract
A review of the literature on the histogenesis and function of the carotid body suggests that the results and the original interpretations of embryological, histological and histochemical investigations have not provided a convincing explanation of the origin of this structure. That the carotid body is developed from mesoderm and is a sensory organ (chemoreceptor) seems unlikely because of: morphological similarities between some of the carotid body tumours and certain tumours of peripheral nerves; certain electron microscopic similarities between the cells of carotid body and adrenal medulla; chromatographic demonstration of catecholamines in the human carotid bodies; and contradictory results of both animal experiments and clinical observations concerning function of this structure.It is concluded that the carotid body arises from ectoderm and should probably be classified as a gland of internal secretion, related to the adrenal medulla and other paraganglia.Keywords
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Controlled Trial of Hypnosis in the Symptomatic Treatment of AsthmaBMJ, 1962
- A FUNCTIONAL CAROTID-BODY-LIKE TUMOR - SECRETING LEVARTERENOL1962
- Surgical Removal of the Carotid Body for Bronchial AsthmaDiseases of the Chest, 1961
- PAROXYSMAL HYPOTENSION DUE TO AN ADRENALINE-SECRETING PHÆOCHROMOCYTOMAThe Lancet, 1961
- Electron Microscopic Observations of the Carotid Body of the CatThe Journal of cell biology, 1959
- Malignant hypertension in a case of nonchromaffin paraganglioma with a high concentration of catecholamineCancer, 1959
- Response of the Adrenal Medulla of the Sheep Fœtus to AsphyxiaNature, 1958
- LXXX Carotid Body Tumor of the Trachea Glomus Jugularis Tumor, Tympanic Body Tumor, Nonchromaffin ParagangliomaAnnals of Otology, Rhinology & Laryngology, 1956
- Chemodectoma (“Nonchromaffin Paraganglioma”) of the Mediastinum: Report of two CasesAmerican Journal of Clinical Pathology, 1951
- GLOMUS TYMPANICUM. ITS OCCURRENCE IN MAN AND ITS RELATION TO MIDDLE EAR TUMOURS OF CAROTID BODY TYPEActa Pathologica Microbiologica Scandinavica, 1951