By John Emery

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17. EM of primitive respiratory bronchioles lined predominantly by cuboidal cells containing glycogen, but lacking inclusion bodies. There are a few short protrusions of cytoplasm, but typical microvilli are also absent. There is a type I epithelial cell with an attenuated extension (arrow) over a capillary containing an endothelial nucleus and red cell. EM x 6 , 0 0 0 . 36 Fig. 1 8 . EM of a larger primitive bronchiole to show the columnar epithelium and an adjacent artery. EM x 5 , 7 5 0 . Fig.

Cohn, J . E. ' Amer. J. , 1 2 2 , 6 3 1 . Luke, J . L . , Spicer, S. S. ' Lab. , 1 4 , 2 1 0 1 . Macklin, C. C. ' Lancet, i, 1 0 9 9 . Niden, A. H. ' Science, 1 5 8 , 1 3 2 3 . Pattle, R. E . , 1 7 5 , 1 1 2 5 . ' Physiol. , 4 5 , 4 8 . , Riedel, B. ' Lab. , 1 8 , 5 4 . , Leblond, C. P. ' J. Cell Biol, 3 2 , 2 7 . Scarpelli, E . M. ' Bull. N. Y. Acad. , 4 4 , 4 3 1 . Schaefer, K. E . , Avery, M. E . , Bensch, K. ' J. clin. , 2 43, 2080. Schultz, H. ( 1 9 5 9 ) Die Submikroskopische Anatomie und Pathologie der Lunge.

T h e r e is often aggregation o f m e s e n chymal cells (future p e r i b r o n c h i a l muscular c o a t ) around s o m e o f the larger epithelial tubes (Fig. 9 ) . ( b ) Vessels. Capillaries are n o t seen in c o n t a c t with the epithelial tubes and are uniformly distributed in the m e s e n c h y m a l tissue although they can be seen easily only w h e n the capillary contains a red cell (Fig. 9 ) . T h e endothelial cells are usually t h i c k - w a l l e d , often w i t h a n a r r o w Fig.

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