Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
Specifically, the spleen forms within, and from, the dorsal mesentery.
Migration from the hindgut along the gut and across the dorsal mesentery then takes place.
Peritoneal folds develop from the ventral and dorsal mesentery of the embryo.
Transverse mesocolon is a derivative of dorsal mesentery in the embryo.
Abdominal portion becomes contained in dorsal mesentery, part of the serosal mesoderm.
The greater omentum develops from the dorsal mesentery that connects the stomach to the posterior abdominal wall.
The mesentery is derived from what is known in the embryo as the dorsal mesentery.
The spleen develops from mesenchymal cells between layers of the dorsal mesentery of the stomach.
The dorsal mesentery is larger than the ventral mesentery, which gradually becomes other parts of the peritoneum.
Dorsal mesentery of the jejunal and ileal loops forms the mesentery proper.
The migration of these PGCs is similar to amphibians along the dorsal mesentery to the genital ridges.
The dorsal pancreas appears first, at around day 26, opposite the developing hepatic duct, and grows into the dorsal mesentery.
This fold projects into the abdominal cavity at the side of the dorsal mesentery, reaching from the septum transversum in front to the fifth lumbar segment behind.
Consequently, the blind-ended sac (also called the lesser sac) formed by the dorsal mesentery is brought inferiorly, where it assumes its final position as the greater omentum.
Classically, the affected area of bowel assumes a spiral configuration and is described to have an "apple peel" like appearance; this is accompanied by lack of a dorsal mesentery.
Initially, the gut tube from the caudal end of the foregut to the end of the hindgut is suspended from the dorsal body wall by dorsal mesentery.
It develops from four components: the septum transversum (central tendon), the pleuroperitoneal membranes, the dorsal mesentery of the esophagus, and muscular components from somites at cervical levels three to five (C3-5) of the body wall.
The portion of mesentery attached to the greater curvature of the stomach is named the dorsal mesentery (or dorsal mesogastrium, when referring to the portion at the stomach), and the part which suspends the colon is termed the mesocolon.
By the fifth week, the connecting tissue bridge has narrowed, and the caudal part of the foregut, the midgut, and a major part of the hindgut are suspended from the abdominal wall by the dorsal mesentery, which extends from the lower end of the esophagus to the cloacal region of the hindgut.