Ovarian appendages (epoophoron) - consist of a network of transverse tubules and a longitudinal duct of the appendage located between the leaves of the mesentery of the fallopian tube between the ovary and the end of the tube.
| Appendages of the ovary | |
|---|---|
Ovarian appendages in the form of fan-shaped lines diverging above the ovary | |
The uterus and ovary, appendages are visible above the ovary. | |
| Precursor | Wolf Channel [1] |
| Catalogs | |
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Paroophoron appendage (paroophoron) - is a small sized nodule of yellowish color, which also lies in the mesentery of the fallopian tube, near the tube end of the ovary. Vesicular appendices (appendices vesiculosae), or stalk hydrates, look like vesicles (they may normally be absent), suspended on long legs filled with a clear liquid. All appendages of the ovaries are vestigial formations, the remains of the primary kidney and its duct.
The ovary receives nutrition from the ovarian artery (a. Ovarica) and the ovary branch of the uterine artery (r. Ovaricus). Blood flows from the ovary through the ovarian vein (vv. Ovaricae).
Notes
- ↑ Netter, Frank H .; Cochard, Larry R. Netter's Atlas of human embryology. - Teterboro, NJ: Icon Learning Systems, 2002. - P. 173. - ISBN 0-914168-99-1 .
- ↑ 1 2 Foundational Model of Anatomy
Literature
- Weight M.G., Lysenkov N.K. Human anatomy. - 11th revised and supplemented. - Hippocrates. - 704 s. - 5,000 copies. - ISBN 5-8232-0192-3 .