Mesovarium
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mesovarium | |
---|---|
Transverse section of human embryo eight and a half to nine weeks old. (Mesovarium visible at center.) | |
Uterus and right broad ligament, seen from behind. (Broad ligament visible at center. Mesovarium not labeled, but it is the portion of the broad ligament closest to the ovary.) | |
Gray's | subject #252 1207 |
Dorlands/Elsevier | m_11/12527676 |
The mesovarium is the portion of the broad ligament of the uterus that covers the ovaries.
At first the mesonephros and genital ridge are suspended by a common mesentery, but as the embryo grows the genital ridge gradually becomes pinched off from the mesonephros, with which it is at first continuous, though it still remains connected to the remnant of this body by a fold of peritoneum. In the male this is the mesorchium, and in the female, this is the mesovarium.
[edit] Additional images
[edit] External links
- SUNY Labs 43:03-0402 - "The Female Pelvis: The Broad ligament"
- SUNY Figs 43:02-10 - "Posterior view of the broad ligament of the uterus, on the left side."
- SUNY Anatomy Image 9637
- Norman/Georgetown pelvis (uterus, broadligament)
- Human anatomy at Dartmouth figures/chapter_35/35-8.HTM
- Photo at murraystate.edu (look for #3)
- Diagram at mcgill.ca