POSTNATAL-GROWTH OF THE MOUSE BLADDER
- 1 December 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 143, 39-43
Abstract
Data are presented on the postnatal growth of the mouse bladder. Both bladder size (measured as surface area) and bladder wet weight increase steadily with age, respectively reaching 2.5 times and 4 times their newborn values by the age of ten weeks. Despite this growth, which may be due principally to non-urothelial components of the bladder, the body weight rises 10-15 fold above the newborn levels. The ratio of bladder weight to the total body weight steadily declines from a peak value in newborn mice to a stable plateau reached at about five weeks of age. The results indicate a fairly mature bladder exists at birth.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Development and Maturation of the Bladder Epithelium of the Guinea PigCells Tissues Organs, 1981
- THE MAMMALIAN URINARY BLADDERAN ACCOMMODATING ORGANBiological Reviews, 1975
- Cell kinetics of mouse urinary bladder epithelium. I. Circadian and age variations in cell proliferation and nuclear DNA content.1975