File talk:Human ovary - corpus luteum 01.jpg: Difference between revisions
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file:///Users/markhill/Desktop/Slides/Genital/Ovary/Human_Ovary-Corpus_Luteum/image1.html | file:///Users/markhill/Desktop/Slides/Genital/Ovary/Human_Ovary-Corpus_Luteum/image1.html | ||
Ed Uthman - [ | Ed Uthman - [https://flic.kr/p/55DLmj Human Ovary with Fully Developed Corpus Luteum] | ||
:"This normal ovary was removed in the course of a hysterectomy for uterine disease. The bright yellow corpus luteum is fully developed, as it would be in the mid-luteal phase of the menstrual cycle following ovulation. The corpus luteum produces progesterone, which supports the endometrium's ability to accommodate the implanted conceptus. If a conceptus implants, the corpus luteum grows even bigger, to form the so-called "corpus luteum of pregnancy." If no pregnancy occurs, the corpus luteum shrinks dramatically to become a corpus albicans. This ovary also sports several corpora albicantia from previous months' cycles, one of which is marked." | :"This normal ovary was removed in the course of a hysterectomy for uterine disease. The bright yellow corpus luteum is fully developed, as it would be in the mid-luteal phase of the menstrual cycle following ovulation. The corpus luteum produces progesterone, which supports the endometrium's ability to accommodate the implanted conceptus. If a conceptus implants, the corpus luteum grows even bigger, to form the so-called "corpus luteum of pregnancy." If no pregnancy occurs, the corpus luteum shrinks dramatically to become a corpus albicans. This ovary also sports several corpora albicantia from previous months' cycles, one of which is marked." |
Latest revision as of 07:16, 11 April 2014
file:///Users/markhill/Desktop/Slides/Genital/Ovary/Human_Ovary-Corpus_Luteum/image1.html
Ed Uthman - Human Ovary with Fully Developed Corpus Luteum
- "This normal ovary was removed in the course of a hysterectomy for uterine disease. The bright yellow corpus luteum is fully developed, as it would be in the mid-luteal phase of the menstrual cycle following ovulation. The corpus luteum produces progesterone, which supports the endometrium's ability to accommodate the implanted conceptus. If a conceptus implants, the corpus luteum grows even bigger, to form the so-called "corpus luteum of pregnancy." If no pregnancy occurs, the corpus luteum shrinks dramatically to become a corpus albicans. This ovary also sports several corpora albicantia from previous months' cycles, one of which is marked."