Review: Exploration of placentation from human beings to ocean-living species

Abstract This review covers four topics. 1) Placental pathology in Himalayan mountain people. To determine morphological changes of the placenta at high altitude, pathological examination was made of 1000 Himalayan placentas obtained in Nepal and Tibet and the results compared with Japanese placenta...

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Veröffentlicht in:Placenta (Eastbourne) 2013-03, Vol.34, p.S17-S23
Hauptverfasser: Soma, H, Murai, N, Tanaka, K, Oguro, T, Kokuba, H, Yoshihama, I, Fujita, K, Mineo, S, Toda, M, Uchida, S, Mogoe, T
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract This review covers four topics. 1) Placental pathology in Himalayan mountain people. To determine morphological changes of the placenta at high altitude, pathological examination was made of 1000 Himalayan placentas obtained in Nepal and Tibet and the results compared with Japanese placentas delivered at sea level. Characteristic findings in the placental villi of the Himalayan group included high incidences of villous chorangiosis and chorangioma. These processes were clarified by ultrastructural observation. 2) Placentation in Sirenians. The giant Takikawa sea cow, which lived 5 million years ago, was discovered on Hokkaido, Japan. It was an ancestor of the dugong as well as the manatees. Sirenia, the sea cow group, shares a common ancestor with Proboscidea, the elephants, even though they now inhabit quite different environments. A comparison was made of their zonary endothelial type of placentation. 3) Placentation in sharks and rays. The remarkable placentation of hammerhead sharks and manta rays is described. 4) Placentation in the Antarctic minke whale. Placental tissue samples of this whale were obtained from the Japan Institute of Cetacean Research. In an ultrastructural study of the utero–placental junction, microfilamental processes of the allantochorionic zone and crypt formation were visualized.
ISSN:0143-4004
1532-3102
DOI:10.1016/j.placenta.2012.11.021