Kidney of the great indian rhino Rhinoceros unicornis , linnaeus
1987; Wiley; Volume: 180; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1002/aja.1001800410
ISSN1553-0795
Autores Tópico(s)Animal Genetics and Reproduction
ResumoThe kidney of R. unicornis has almost 80 closely apposed lobes, all appearing peripherally. Every lobe, almost enclosed by a collagenous septum, resembles a deformed truncated cone. The pelvis proper is a small pouch which divides into a cephalic and a caudal urothelial-lined fibromuscular conduit. The terminal collecting ducts of every lobe open into a tubus maximus. This is lined by cuboidal cells and otherwise has no wall. There is no papilla. All lobes finally empty through the 18 primary infundibular orifices at the pelvic conduits. A primary fibromuscular infundibulum typically yields a secondary one supplying an adjacent lobe. Two or three lobes can use a common tubus maximus by "convergence" of their medullae. Tubus maximus, terminal collecting ducts and deep outer medulla are embraced by a fibromuscular calyx which is the peripheral extension of an infundibulum and is fused to the outer medulla. There is thus no vault between medulla and calyx. Large intralobar veins are fused to the outer wall of the calyx. The possible significance of this is discussed. The cortex is the only part of a lobe which has contact with infundibulum, pelvic conduits, or pelvis proper. The kidney has about 16 million glomeruli which form 5.8% of the adult's cortical mass. Many adult mammals, from mouse to rhinoceros, fit into the log10-log10 slope relating number of glomeruli per kidney to body-mass. Neonatal rhinos at term have mature glomeruli throughout the cortex. The small size of the glomeruli and the large number per field allow 16 million in an 118-gm kidney.
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