COMPARISON OF ORIENTATION OF ELASTIN FIBERS IN ELASTIC LAMINAE OF PULMONARY TRUNK AND AORTA OF RABBITS USING SCANNING ELECTRON-MICROSCOPE
- 1 January 1976
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 35 (6) , 525-529
Abstract
Five pulmonary trunks and 2 aortas from adult rabbits were fixed in formalin as close to their in vivo dimensions as possible. They were then cut open, pinned out, stripped to expose their medial elastic laminae, dehydrated and coated with Au. The arteries were examined under a scanning electron microscope, and 20 photographs were taken of each specimen. The tangential surface of an elastic lamina apparently consisted of long, parallel, anastomosing, broad elastin fibers with numerous finer fibrils interconnecting them at right angles. The angle which each elastin fiber made with the circumferential axis of the vessel was measured. Although elastin fibers within any particular level within the media were all roughly parallel, there was variation in orientation of fibers between successive elastic laminae. This variation was relatively slight in the aorta where most fibers were approximately circumferentially oriented. In the pulmonary trunk the variation in orientation was extreme and extended completely over a 180.degree. range.This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit:
- Preparation of animal tissues for surface‐scanning electron microscopyJournal of Microscopy, 1969