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The Position of the Uterus and Fetus at Term (1872)

Braune, Wilhelm (1831-1892): Die Lage des Uterus und Foetus am Ende der Schwangerschaft. (Leipzig: Verlag von Viet & Comp., 1872).

This sagittal section through the maternal anatomy shows the relative size and position of the fetus during pregnancy.

Note also the altered maternal anatomical relationships during the pregnancy.


Braune Image Links: Uterus and Fetus Position at Term | Section through Uterus and Fetus | Uterus without Fetus | Uterus and Fetus Position at Birth | Section through Uterus and Fetus at Birth | Uterus without Fetus at Birth | 17-18 C Anatomies


The body from which this preparation was made was quite recent, twenty-five years of age, in the last month of pregnancy, and received in the condition of rigor mortis. Beyond the constriction of the neck produced by the means of death (hanging) no abnormality existed. The condition of the genitals corresponded with an advanced stage of pregnancy, and were injected and succulent. The method of preparation was carried out in the usual manner.

The uterus is so folded over the symphysis that its anterior wall forms a kind of sac, indicating a condition of relaxation. The numerous large veins in its tissue are shown in the plate in the wall as simple strokes, their lumina becoming recognisable only when their walls were separated from each other; they appear patent, however, in the vaginal portion of the uterus and in the vagina itself. The vaginal portion of the uterus is proportionately deep, and for the most part lies in the left half of the body, the section having passed through its right half and opened merely the first portion of the cervix, as shown in Plate XXIX A. It was filled with viscid mucus and opened into the cavity of the uterus, about one fifth of an inch below the plane of section, so that its upper half could not be seen. The length of the vagina at this period of pregnancy makes it probable that the woman was not a primipara, notwithstanding that there were no cicatrices on the abdominal parietes, and the os internum was so narrow that only a very small sound could pass it. The number of veins met with in the right half of the vagina and their swollen condition is remarkable, and their lumina are peculiarly well seen in the left half of the preparation, Plate XXIX B. The falling in of the vaginal portion of the uterus is remarkable, considering the empty contracted condition of the bladder. The latter has slipped down bodily from the inner surface of the symphysis, and is so completely displaced that the course of the urethra has become bent at an angle. The external os lies in the hollow of the under border of the symphysis, although, according to Moreau, it corresponds at the end of pregnancy with the level of the upper border of the symphysis, and is still higher according to Schultze.


The level of the fundus corresponds nearly with the under border of the first lumbar vertebra; a more accurate definition cannot be given, as the highest point of the uterus was not included in the section, as it inclined more to the right side. This is almost the level given by Moreau, and according to the measurements of Schultze (' Wandtafeln,' taf. vi), it would appear to be the second lumbar vertebra. As the parts in the meanwhile began to thaw, a more accurate measurement in this particular could not be made.


The depth of the cavity of the uterus and its connections, and of the entire cavity of the abdomen, is less than is usually admitted. Notwithstanding the size of the foetus it is not improbable that the attitude of the body had some influence in this respect, and that lying horizontally on the back the uterus obtained a kind of fulcrum on the vertebral column, whilst in the upright position the yielding walls of the abdomen are pushed forwards. It is farther to be remembered that in dead bodies generally in consequence of the high position of the diaphragm, the depth of the cavity of the abdomen is less than during life.


In the present instance the distance of the lumbar vertebrae from the anterior wall of the abdomen was almost one third of the entire sagittal diameter of the body at its point of greatest distension ; whilst in the body which in Plate II is represented in the second month of pregnancy, the lumbar spine projects slightly beyond the middle of this diameter.


Finally, the vessels were in this case uninjected a circumstance which is to be taken into consideration in estimating the thickness of the walls of the uterus.

The soft parts of the neck are considerably dislocated towards the left side, owing to the hypertrophied thyroid body. The trachea lies so far over to the left side that only a small portion of the thyroid cartilage is met with.


The brain was divided through its right half, the radiation of the fibres of the right corpus callosum being thus shown. Beneath it is the descending cornu of the right lateral ventricle with the pes hippocampi. Beneath the dura mater, in the right half of the preparation, a portion of the Gasserian ganglion and some fibres of the fifth nerve are seen.

The relations of the skeleton, however, are of the greatest importance. I had therefore, after all. the plates were drawn, the halves of the skeleton macerated, and the parts as accurately as possible adjusted with regard to each other, as represented in the adjoining woodcut. It presents a slightly scoliosed pelvis, with a like condition of the spine. It shows moreover that the deviation of the line of section from the middle line was not so considerable as the plate might suggest. The section passed through the pelvis, as near as possible in the middle line, externally and to the right of the lumbar vertebrge, meeting the dorsal at their articulation with the ribs, and passing again in the cervical region to the middle of the spinal column, and subsequently again to the right in the skull. Beyond the scoliosed condition of the spine there was nothing worthy of remark, except that there were two cervical ribs, one complete on the right side, and a rudimentary one on the left side of the seventh cervical vertebra. There were seven cervical vertebrse, but only eleven dorsal and five lumbar. There was a rudimentary process from the fifth lumbar which was attached to the upper portion of the sacrum. The measurements of the pelvis in inches were as follows : The conjugata vera 3.8 in. (the conjugata at the narrowest points being 3.7) ; the right sacro-cotyloid 2.8 in. ; the left sacro-cotyloid 3.2 in. ; the transverse diameter 5*8 in. ; the left oblique diameter, 5.08 in., and the right oblique diameter 5.6 inches. The sacrum was 4.5 in. deep and 4.8 in. broad.

The question arises whether, in a weak obliquely contracted pelvis, showing such a variation, child-birth be possible without surgical aid.

Detailed description of this Plate XXIX A, XXIX B, and XXX | Uterus and Fetus Position at Term - original version

Reference

Braune, W. An atlas of topographical anatomy after plane sections of frozen bodies. Trans. by Edward Bellamy. (Philadelphia: Lindsay and Blakiston, 1877)


Author: Braune, Wilhelm, 1831-1892.

Artist: Schmiedel, C.

Title: Die Lage des Uterus und Foetus Ende der Schwangerschaft, nach durchschnitten an Gefrornen Cadavern. (The position of the uterus and fetus end of pregnancy, according to frost-cut Cadavern)

Publication: Leipzig: Verlag con Veit & Comp., 1872.

Collation: 1 portfolio ([6] p., 4 folded leaves of plates) ; 58 x 39 cm.

General Notes: Open plates measure 109 x 37 cm.

Call number: QS B825t 1872 Suppl. OVR

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Cite this page: Hill, M.A. (2024, June 1) Embryology BrauneB1.jpg. Retrieved from https://embryology.med.unsw.edu.au/embryology/index.php/File:BrauneB1.jpg

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current15:34, 30 October 2012Thumbnail for version as of 15:34, 30 October 20121,200 × 485 (139 KB)Z8600021 (talk | contribs)
18:31, 10 September 2009Thumbnail for version as of 18:31, 10 September 20091,000 × 384 (48 KB)S8600021 (talk | contribs)
15:09, 22 July 2009Thumbnail for version as of 15:09, 22 July 2009600 × 241 (20 KB)MarkHill (talk | contribs)Braune, Wilhelm (1831-1892): Topographisch-anatomischer Atlas : nach Durchschnitten an gefrornen Cadavern, Leipzig: Verlag von Veit & Comp., 1867-1872. (Topographic-anatomical Atlas) http://www.nlm.nih.gov/exhibition/historicalanatomies/braune_home.html