Lecture 11 and 12: Functional Anatomy of the Female Reproductive Tract Flashcards

1
Q

Gross Anatomy and Functions

A
  1. Ovaries: production of gametes and hormones
  2. oviducts: an optimal environment for fertilization
  3. Uterus: sperm transport, embryo fetus development, the formation of the placenta
  4. cervix: barrier for uterine protection
  5. Vagina: copulatory organ
  6. vulva: external genitalia, vaginal closure
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2
Q

Tubular Components of the Reproductive Tract

A

Oviducts, uterus, cervix, and vagina
Four Distinct Layers
1. Serosa: outer connective tissue
- support, prevents adhesions
2. Muscularis: outer longitudinal layer and an inner circular layer
- contractions: gamete/embryo transfer, parturition
3. Submucosa: supports mucosa, varied thickness
- blood vessels, nerves, lymphatics
4. Mucosa: secretory epithelium lines lumen
- cell type present –> dependent on function

the reproductive tract develops behind the peritoneum. as it develops, the reproductive tract pushed against the peritoneum and becomes completely surrounded by the peritoneum(serosa layer), which is continuous with the broad ligament

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3
Q

Broad Ligament

A
  • houses vascular supply, lymphatics and nerves
  • support (‘hang’) several anatomical components of the reproductive tract
  • divided in 3 regions
    - mesovarium (ovaries)
    - mesosalpinx (oviducts)
    - mesometrium (uterus, cervix)
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4
Q

Blood Supply of the Reproductive Tract

A

arteries:
- ovarian artery –> goes into ovarian pedicle which houses the vascular utero-ovarian plexus (UOP) –> allows for counter-current exchange of molecules
- uterine artery
- vaginal artery

Veins

  • vaginal vein
  • uterine vein
  • ovarian-uterine vein
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5
Q

Ovaries

A

profound morphological changes during reproductive cycles, which are associated with changes in physiology and behaviour

Function: production of oocytes, and hormones

  • oocytes are enclosed in ovarian follicles
    • primordial, primary, secondary, antral (secrete estrogen and inhibin)

ovaries are composed of:

  • tunica albuginea - outer connective tissue
  • cortex - houses follicles and CLs
  • medulla: central part (except for mares) that house vasculature, lymphatics and nerves
  • hilus: formed by mesovarium: supply of vessels to medulla
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6
Q

Corpus Luteum

A

develops after ovulation by differentiaion of follicle cells into luteal cells that secrete progesterone

  • corpus hemorrhagicum (developing CL)
  • corpus albicans (regressing CL)

theca cells differentiate into small luteal cells
granulosa cells differentiate into large luteal cells
both have LH receptors and produce progesterone

blood vessels represent ~50% of CL volume
luteal cells represent ~30%
remaining 20% = pericytes, fibrocytes, nerves, immune and smooth muscle cells

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7
Q

Follicle

A

single layer of flattened cells

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8
Q

Pool of primordial follicles

A

ovarian reserve

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9
Q

primary follicle

A

single layer of cuboid cells

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10
Q

secondary follicle

A

two-three layers of cubical cells

  • zona pellucida present
  • up to this stage follicle development does not depend on gonadotropins, it is controlled by local factors
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11
Q

developing antral (tertiary )follcile

A

follicular fluid derives from plasma

development now depends on FSH (initially) and LH (final stages)

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12
Q

antral (dominant) follicle

A

LH dependent
three layers of cells

  1. theca externa
    - loose connective tissue that completely surrounds and supports the follicle
  2. theca internal
    - layer just beneath the theca internal
    - LH receptors
    - produce androgens (testosterone)
  3. Granulosa Cells
    - layer just beneath the theca internal (separated by a thin basement membrane)
    - no direct blood supply
    - FSH receptors
    - convert androgens into estradiol
    - produce inhibin
    - those in close proximity of the oocyte are called cumulus cells
    • intensive crosstalk with oocyte- coordinate oocyte development
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13
Q

ovulating follicle:

A

induced by LH peak

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14
Q

Oviducts

A

Function: transport of COC and sperm (also capacitation) provide optimal environmental for fertilization and early embryo development

divided into 3 parts

  1. Infundibulum
    • terminal end (funnel shaped)
    • capture COC after ovulation
    • fimbriae- finger like projection s
  2. Ampulla
    • ~50% of oviduct length
    • thick, larger diameter
    • mucosal folds, ciliated epithelium
      - fertilization
      - transport zygote
  3. Isthmus
    • smaller in diameter
    • thicker muscular layer
    • fewer mucosal folds
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15
Q

Uterus

A

bicornuate uterus = body and two horns - most common in livestock

connects oviducts to cervis

  • mucosa and submucosa = endometrium
  • muscularis = myometrium
  • serosa= perimetrium

Nonpregnant

  • secretion of prostaglandins and control of luteolysis
  • transport and capacitation of sperm

Organ of Pregnancy

  • provide optimal environment for the developing embryo
    • histotroph- embryo nutrition
  • place of conceptus implantation
  • maternal contribution to placenta
  • expulsion of fetus and fetal placenta a parturition
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16
Q

Cervix

A

canal surrounded by a thick wall with single or multiple layers of rings/folds, connective tissue, smooth muscle, secretory
mucosa (columnar epithelium ± cilia)
estrogen increases secretion of clear/ watering mucous during estrus, lubricates the vagina and flushes our foreign material

During Pregnancy

  • viscous mucus (glue)
  • cervical seal of pregnancy
  • barrier for protection of pregnancy from foreign material
17
Q

Vagina

A
copulatory organ 
birth canal
expulsion of urine during micturition 
- poorly organised 
- highly adapted mucosal epithelium 

Cranial Portion

  • derived from paramesonephrioc ducts
  • columar epithelium (some ciliated)
  • high degree of secretory activity

caudal portion (vestibule)

  • derived from urogenital sinus
  • stratified squamous epithelium
  • secretion and thickness changes with stage of the cycle
18
Q

External Genitalia - vulva

A

function: provides anatomical closure to vagina and minimize entry of foreign material

anatomy: external part of reproductive tract
- labia: major and minor
- ventral commisure: clitoral fossa contains clitoris
- skin : sebaceous and sweat glands, hair follicles, adipose tissue
- constrictor vulva muscle: keep labia closed