Summary
In adult guinea-pigs, oral to a partial obstruction to the flow of ingesta in the ileum there is a marked increase in the diameter of the intestine and a hypertrophy of the muscle coat. The features of the intramuscular blood vessels and of the extracellular materials were studied by electron microscopy. There is a small increase in the amount of intercellular space measured morphometrically. The basal lamina surrounding the hypertrophic muscle cells is more prominent than in controls. In the intercellular space between muscle cells, in addition to collagen fibrils, there is abundant amorphous material of medium electron density and streak-like, electron-dense material often similar to thickened basal laminae. The total amount of stroma (intercellular materials) present in a unit length of intestine is greatly increased in hypertrophy; a role of the muscle cells in the production of new collagen and other extracellular elements is suggested by the present observations. Many new intramuscular blood vessels (mainly capillaries, some of which are fenestrated) are formed during hypertrophy of the intestinal wall, so that the circular muscle layer remains as well vascularized in the hypertrophic intestine as in the controls. Blood vessels are not formed within the longitudinal muscle layer.
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Gabella, G. Hypertrophic smooth muscle. Cell Tissue Res. 235, 275–283 (1984). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00217851
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00217851