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1.
The gills of the Atlantic cod, Gadus morhua, were studied using immunohistochemical techniques. Primary antibodies directed against serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine, 5-HT) and acetylated α-tubulin were used to visualise cells containing serotonin and nerve fibres, respectively. Three morphologically different 5-HT immunoreactive cell types were distinguished: (I) Neuroepithelial cells (NECs), which were abundant along the distal half of the efferent filamental arteries (EFAs), and particularly formed distinct clusters at the individual filamental tips, (II) bipolar neurones running next to the EFAs and (III) multipolar neurones innervating the proximal parts of the EFA. In addition, the study revealed a well-developed system of nerve fibres, some of which form plexuses in association with the NECs. A relatively rich innervation of the proximal part of the EFAs, in conjunction with the EFA sphincters was also observed. Delicate varicose terminals surround the bases of the efferent lamellar arterioles. The localisation of distinct clusters of NECs at the individual filamental tips and the close connection with nerve terminals suggests a function as external branchial oxygen receptors.  相似文献   

2.
Tunas (family: Scombridae, Tribe: Thunnini) exhibit anatomical, physiological, and biochemical adaptations that dramatically increase the ability of their cardiorespiratory systems to transfer oxygen from the water to the tissues. In the present study the vascular anatomy of the skipjack tuna, Katsuwonus pelamis, gill was examined by light and scanning electron microscopic analysis of methyl methacrylate vascular corrosion replicas prepared under physiological pressure. The gill filament contains three distinct blood pathways, respiratory, interlamellar, and nutrient. The respiratory, or arterio-arterial (AA) pathway, is the site of gas exchange and consists of the afferent and efferent filamental arteries (AFA and EFA) and arterioles (ALA and ELA) and the lamellae. Each ALA in the basal filament supplies ten or more lamellae and they anastomose with their neighbor to form a continuous vascular arcade. Four modifications in the lamellar circulation appear to enhance gas exchange efficiency. 1) The ALA deliver blood directly to the outer margin of the lamellae where unstirred boundary layer effects are predicted to be minimal and water PO2 highest. 2) Pillar cells are closely aligned along the outer boundary of the inlet side and the inner boundary of the outlet side of the lamellae to form multiple distributing and receiving blood channels. 3) Elsewhere in the lamella, pillar cells are aligned to form diagonal channels that direct blood from the outer to the inner lamellar margins, thereby reducing vascular resistance. 4) The lamellar sinusoid is especially widened near the efferent end to augment oxygen saturation of blood flowing through the inner margin. These adaptations, plus the presence of a bow-shaped interlamellar septum, and a thinned filament core appear to decrease gill vascular resistance and maximize gas-exchange efficiency. The interlamellar (IL) and nutrient systems originate from post-lamellar vessels and are arterio-venous (AV) pathways. IL vessels form an extensive ladder-like lattice on both sides of the filamental cartilage and are supplied in part by narrow-bore vessels from the medial wall of the EFA. Their function is unknown. Nutrient vessels are formed from the confluence of a myriad of tortuous, narrow-bore vessels arising from the basal region of the EFA and from efferent branchial arteries. They re-enter the filament and eventually drain into the IL system or filamental veins. As these AV pathways are retained despite considerable reduction in filamental tissue, it is evident that they are integral components of other non-respiratory homeostatic activities of the gill.  相似文献   

3.
The general macrocirculation and branchial microcirculation of the air-breathing climbing perch, Anabas testudineus, was examined by light and scanning electron microscopy of vascular corrosion replicas. The ventral aorta arises from the heart as a short vessel that immediately bifurcates into a dorsal and a ventral branch. The ventral branch distributes blood to gill arches 1 and 2, the dorsal branch to arches 3 and 4. The vascular organization of arches 1 and 2 is similar to that described for aquatic breathing teleosts. The respiratory lamellae are well developed but lack a continuous inner marginal channel. The filaments contain an extensive nutritive and interlamellar network; the latter traverses the filament between, but in register with, the inner lamellar margins. Numerous small, tortuous vessels arise from the efferent filamental and branchial arteries and anastomose with each other to form the nutrient supply for the filament, adductor muscles, and arch supportive tissues. The efferent branchial arteries of arches 1 and 2 supply the accessory air-breathing organs. Arches 3 and 4 are modified to serve primarily as large-bore shunts between the dorsal branch of the ventral aorta and the dorsal aorta. In many filaments from arches 3 and 4, the respiratory lamellae are condensed and have only 1-3 large channels. In some instances in arch 4, shunt vessels arise from the afferent branchial artery and connect directly with the efferent filamental artery. The filamental nutrient and interlamellar systems are poorly developed or absent. The respiratory and systemic pathways in Anabas are arranged in parallel. Blood flows from the ventral branch of the ventral aorta, through gill arches 1 and 2, into the accessory respiratory organs, and then returns to the heart. Blood, after entering the dorsal branch of the ventral aorta, passes through gill arches 3 and 4 and proceeds to the systemic circulation. This arrangement optimizes oxygen delivery to the tissues and minimizes intravascular pressure in the branchial and air-breathing organs. The efficiency of this system is limited by the mixing of respiratory and systemic venous blood at the heart.  相似文献   

4.
The adrenergic innervation of structures in the gills of brown and rainbow trout was studied with catecholamine fluorescence histochemistry. In the arterio-arterial vascular pathway, there was an innervation of the afferent and efferent lamellar arterioles, but the afferent and efferent filamental arteries and the secondary lamellae were devoid of any fluorescent nerve fibres. In S. trutta only, there was an additional innervation of the afferent and efferent branchial arteries and the base of the efferent filamental artery. The innervation of the arterio-venous vascular pathway was similar in both trout species. Many fluorescent nerve fibres were found on nutritive arterioles in the gill arch and interbranchial septum, and in the core of each filament between the surface epithelium and the wall of the filament venous sinus. No fluorescent nerve fibres were observed at the origins of the capillaries arising from the efferent filamental artery. The sympathetic nerve supply is provided to the gills mainly through the posttrematic nerve, with an occasional small contribution through the pretrematic nerve. The presence of adrenergic nerves in the gills is discussed in relation to the regulation of blood flow through the arterio-arterial and arterio-venous pathways.  相似文献   

5.
Vascular anatomy of the fish gill   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The fish gill is the most physiologically diversified vertebrate organ, and its vasculature the most intricate. Application of vascular corrosion techniques that couple high-fidelity resins, such as methyl methacrylate, with scanning electron microscopy yields three-dimensional replicas of the microcirculation that have fostered a better appreciate gill perfusion pathways. This is the focus of the present review. Three vascular networks can be identified within the gill filament. The arterioarterial (respiratory) pathway consists of the lamellae and afferent and efferent segments of the branchial and filamental arteries and lamellar arterioles. The body of the filament contains two post-lamellar pathways: the interlamellar and nutrient. The interlamellar system is an extensive ladder-like network of thin-walled, highly distensible vessels that traverses the filament between, and parallel to, the lamellae and continues around the afferent and efferent borders of the filament. Interlamellar vessels are supplied by short, narrow-bore feeder vessels from the medial wall of the efferent filamental artery. A myriad of narrow-bore, tortuous arterioles arise from the basal efferent filamental artery and efferent branchial artery and anastomose to form the nutrient circulation of the arch and filament. In the filament body, nutrient capillaries and interlamellar vessels are often closely associated, and the former may ultimately drain into the latter. Many of the anatomical characteristics of interlamellar vessels are strikingly similar to those of mammalian lymphatic capillaries, with the exception that interlamellar vessels are directly fed by arteriovenous-like anastomoses. It is likely that gill interlamellar and mammalian lymphatics are physiologically, if not embryologically, equivalent.  相似文献   

6.
The effects of serotonin on continuously recorded cardiac parameters (heart rate, cardiac output, cardiac stroke volume), ventral and dorsal aortic blood pressures, branchial and systemic vascular resistances were investigated in the European eel in vivo. Intravenous administration of serotonin (30 g · kg–1) caused a marked bradycardia (45%) and a simultaneous decrease in cardiac output (50%), ventral (35%) and dorsal (50%) aortic blood pressures. Branchial resistance was markedly increased (60%) and systemic resistance decreased (30%). Cardiac stroke volume remained unchanged. The effects of serotonin on cardiac mained unchanged. The effects of serotonin on cardiac parameters were suppressed either by methysergide or a bilateral section of the cardiac vagus. Bradycardia could then be regarded as the consequence of a vagal mechanism triggered by serotonin action on central methysergide-sensitive serotonergic receptors. No inotropic effect of serotonin was observed. This lack of myocardiac contractility modification is discussed. The serotonin-mediated branchial vasoconstriction was attenuated by vagotomy, whereas the residual increase in branchial resistance (40%) was suppressed by methysergide. The serotonin-mediated branchial vasoconstriction could be the consequence of both a passive mechanism (compliance) caused by the decrease in cardiac output and an active mechanism involving methysergide-sensitive serotonergic receptors of the branchial vasculature. A possible involvement of this vasomotor effect in gill oxygen uptake is discussed. The serotonin-induced systemic vasodilation was insensitive either to cardiac vagotomy or to 5-HT1/2, 5-HT3 and 5-HT4 receptor antagonists, suggesting the involvement of a local mechanism which remains to be assessed.Abbreviations CSV cardiac stroke volume - DAP dorsal aortic pressure - HR heart rate - QC cardiac output - VAP ventral aortic pressure - VR b branchial vascular resistance - VR s systemic vascular resistance - VR t total vascular resistance - 5-HT 5-Hydroxytryptamine serotonin - RBI Research Biochemical Incorporated, metoclopramide HCl  相似文献   

7.
The vascular organisation of the branchial basket was examined in two Tetraodontiform fishes; the three-barred porcupinefish, Dicotylichthys punctulatus and the banded toadfish, Marylina pleurosticta by scanning electron microscopy of vascular casts and standard histological approaches. In D. punctulatus, interarterial anastomoses (iaas) originated at high densities from the efferent filamental and branchial arteries, subsequently re-anastomosing to form progressively larger secondary vessels. Small branches of this system entered the filament body, where it was interspersed between the intrafilamental vessels. Large-bore secondary vessels ran parallel with the efferent branchial arteries, and were found to constitute an additional arterio–arterial pathway, in that these vessels exited the branchial basket in company with the mandibular, the carotid and the afferent and efferent branchial arteries, from where they gave rise to capillary beds after exit. Secondary vessels were not found to supply filament muscle; rather these tissues were supplied by single specialised vessels running in parallel between the efferent and afferent branchial arteries in both species examined. Although the branchial vascular anatomy was generally fairly similar for the two species examined, iaas were not found to originate from any branchial component in the banded toadfish, M. pleurosticta, which instead showed a moderate frequency of iaas on other vessels in the cephalic region. It is proposed that four independent vascular pathways may be present within the teleostean gill filament, the conventional arterio–arterial pathway across the respiratory lamellae; an arterio–arterial system of secondary vessels supplying the filament and non-branchial tissues; a system of vessels supplying the filament musculature; and the intrafilamental vessels (central venous sinus). The present study demonstrates that phylogenetic differences in the arrangement of the branchial vascular system occur between species of the same taxon.  相似文献   

8.
Bioassay of Channa punctata (± 36 g) was carried out in acidic waters of different pH. A 96 h LC50, value was obtained at pH 5.3. Scanning electron microscopy of gills of C. punctata showed fusion of adjacent secondary lamellae. At this low pH, dissociation of epithelium of branchial arches and gill filaments take place. At 360 h the branchial epithelium ruptures developing lesions in the gills exposing the efferent filament vessels. At pH 6.6 the tips of adjacent filaments belonging to both oral and aboral hemibranchs fuse in blocks.  相似文献   

9.
Gill development begins on the sixth day of incubation at 10°C and is complete by 31 days (hatching). Gill arches are formed by fusion and perforation of ectoderm and endoderm across the pharyngeal wall. A primary branchial artery forms within each arch and a second branchial artery forms as a branch from its ventral end. A series of filament loop vessels forms connecting the two arteries and when several are patent a unidirectional blood flow is established via afferent (second) branchial artery, filament loop vessels to efferent (primary) branchial artery. Part of the efferent branchial artery just above its junction with the afferent branchial artery constricts and occludes. It is suggested that this change in the pattern of blood flow is dependent on differences in resistance of the two branchial arteries. A later extension of the gill ventrally is thought not to be homologous with similar regions in elasmobranchs and Acipenser.  相似文献   

10.
Summary In order to understand the blood flow patterns and their regulation in the gills and pulmonary artery ofAmbystoma tigrinum, the vascular resistance and vasoactivity of the two major branchial perfusion pathways and a vascular plexus in the pulmonary artery were investigated using an isolated-tissue perfusion method. Acetylcholine and epinephrine were both pressor agents in all three vascular segments. Angiotensin II also constricted the branchial respiratory vasculature. Norephinephrine was primarily a vasodilator in the branchial respiratory vasculature, however, it had no effect on the shunt vessels of the gill or the pulmonary arterial plexus. Both gill circulations were insensitive to alterations in CO2 and pH. Anoxia produced a slight vasodilation of the branchial respiratory vessels but had no effect on the shunt vasculature. Mild hypoxia had no effect on either branchial circulations. The results suggest that: (1) blood flow through the respiratory section of the gill may vary between 8 and 47% of total gill flow, (2) the major perfusion pathway to the lung is probably from the efferent artery of the third gill through the ductus arteriosus and then into the pulmonary artery, (3) O2, CO2 and pH exert no local control of branchial perfusion, (4) both cholinergic and adrenergic regulation of branchial and proximal pulmonary arterial vascular resistance is possible, (5) a rise in circulating norepinephrine should increase blood flow to the respiratory section of the gill.Abbreviations AII angiotensin II - ACh acetylcholine - EPi epinephrine - NE norepinephrine  相似文献   

11.
Individual cannulated brown trout monitored during exposure to acidic water showed increased plasma cortisol after 3 h at pH 4.0 with low (0.05 mm) or high (2.8 mm) calcium (Ca) content, and after 2 days in acidic water with a high Ca content. Most fish did not survive for 2 days in acidic water with a low Ca content. Non-cannulated fish showed a similar increase in mean plasma cortisol after 2 days in high-Ca acidic water (pH 4.0–4.6), but not in acidic water of a low Ca content. After 7 days of exposure to acidic water, plasma cortisol appeared to recover when there was a high Ca content but increased 20-fold when Ca content was low. In cannulated fish severe acid stress resulted in a marked and rapid thyroid response. Plasma thyroxine (T4) was elevated after 3 h exposure to acidic water of both low and high Ca content and remained elevated for 2 days of acid exposure with high Ca. In non-cannulated fish an increase in mean T4 was apparent only after 7 days in low-Ca acidic water. Plasma triiodothyronine (T3) levels were not significantly altered by any of the acid regimes. Plasma glucose of cannulated fish was elevated within 3 h of acid-exposure and remained elevated after 2 days in high-Ca acidic water.  相似文献   

12.
Summary Light and scanning electron microscopic observations were made on methyl-methacrylate corrosion casts of the blood vessels in the gills of channel catfish (Ictalurus punctatus). The vasculature of the gill filament can be divided into three distinct pathways: 1. the well-known respiratory circulation which includes the afferent filamental artery (AF), afferent lamellar arteriole (AL), lamella (L), efferent lamellar arteriole (EL) and efferent filamental artery (EF), 2. a nutritive pathway from the EF through small nutritive capillaries (NC) and into one of several filamental veins (FV), and 3. an interlamellar circulation in which small prelamellar arterio-venous anastomoses (PAVA) connect the AL into a series of organized vascular spaces (interlamellar vessels, ILV's) that underlie the interlamellar filamental epithelium. Several sinuslike spaces associated with AF, EF and the filamental cartilagenous support were also observed. The physiological significance of these vascular pathways is discussed.Supported in part by NSF Grant No. PCM 76-16840The authors wish to acknowledge the assistance of Mr. P. Holbert, Miss K. Drajus and Mrs. J. Smith. Gratitude is expressed by Kenneth R. Olson to Dr. Janice Nowell for her helpful suggestions with corrosion casting techniques  相似文献   

13.
Organisms of the Mycobacterium avium complex are common pathogens in immunosuppressed patients such as individuals with AIDS. There is evidence that in AIDS patients, the main route for M. avium infection is the gastrointestinal tract. The stomach is a formidable barrier to pathogens and the ability to resist exposure to pH lower than 3 has been shown to be a virulence determinant of enteric pathogens. Incubation of three clinical isolates of M. avium under acidic pH revealed resistance of M. avium grown both to the exponential and stationary phase at pH 2.2 for 2 h. Inhibition of protein synthesis had no effect on the acid tolerance. When the duration of the incubation at pH 2.2 was extended to 24 h, bacteria grown to the stationary phase had a significantly greater tolerance to acid than exponential phase bacteria. M. avium incubated with acid in the presence of water was significantly more resistant to pH 2.2 than M. avium in the presence of buffer. Pre-adaptation in water prior to exposure to acidic conditions was also associated with increased resistance to pH 2.2. Isoosmolarity of Hank's balanced salt solution appears to be responsible for the impaired resistance to acid between 2 and 24 h of incubation. These findings indicate that M. avium is naturally tolerant to pH<3 and that pre-adaptation under conditions similar to the conditions where M. avium is found in the environment results in increased acid resistance.  相似文献   

14.
Adult fowl of both sexes injected with the monoamine oxidase inhibitor pargyline showed elevated circulating prolactin concentrations and reduced growth hormone concentrations. Young cockerels injected with the serotonin agonist quipazine and the antagonist methysergide showed responses consistent with a serotoninergic stimulatory control of prolactin. Injection of the serotonin precursor tryptophan and the serotonin re-uptake blocker imipramine resulted in elevated prolactin and reduced growth hormone levels. The similarities and differences in the control of prolactin and growth hormone in birds and mammals were discussed.  相似文献   

15.
To better understand how fish are able to inhabit dilute waters of low pH, we examined ionoregulation in exceptionally acid-tolerant neon tetras (Paracheirodon innesi), which are native to the ion-poor, acidic Rio Negro, Amazon. Overall ion balance was unaffected by 2-wk exposure to pH 4.0 and 3.5. Measurements of unidirectional Na+ fluxes during exposure to pH 3.5 showed that tetras experienced only a mild, ionic disturbance of short duration (相似文献   

16.
Summary The isolated gills of Carcinus maenas, perfused at pressure drops of 1–10 cm of water, exhibited flow rectification, the resistance to perfusion via the afferent vessel being many times lower than that for efferent perfusion. The asymmetry was greater at the lower end of this pressure range.The overall afferent branchial resistance for Carcinus of weight 65 g, and with no ventilatory component in the transmural pressure difference, was estimated to be 0.05 cm of water. l–1 · sec. The corresponding overall reverse (efferent) branchial resistance was 0.36 cm of water · l–1 · sec.LM, TEM and SEM examination of the gills indicated that haemolymph leaves each gill lamella via several discrete parallel efferent channels which drain different regions of the lamella, and that each efferent channel is nearly closed, at its junction with the efferent branchial vessel, by a diaphragm of loosely interwoven and very elongated cells. It is concluded that these cells may constitute efferent valves and that narrow apertures between them may contribute a major component to the branchial resistance and be primarily responsible for the rectification of flow. Relatively wide apertures lead directly from the afferent vessel into the lamellae and are not asociated with valves of any kind.The valves may be important in enabling changes in transmural pressure associated with ventilatory reversals to pump haemolymph unidirectionally through the lamellae. Similarly valves may allow the oscillating venous pressures associated with locomotor activity to improve gill perfusion during exercise.The elongated tails of the cells of the efferent valve contain numerous microtubules. The wider cell bodies contain the nucleus and many mitochondria. Unusual organelles composed of many short (about 0.25 m long) microtubules and often lying close to the nuclear membrane may be microtubule organising centres. It is speculated that, in addition to their simple mechanical function, the valve cells may play a more dynamic role in regulating flow of haemolymph through different lamellar routes, or that they may monitor composition, pressure or flow of the efferent lamellar circulation.  相似文献   

17.
The vascular organization of the teleost gill suggests that blood flow distribution from the filamental artery to the respiratory lamellae is governed by relationships analogous to the cable conduction properties of a nerve axon. The space constant (λ) by definition is the distance along the gill filament at which the in-series resistance of the afferent filament artery equals the in-parallel resistance of the afferent lamellar arteriolar, lamellar, efferent lamellar arteriolar (ALA-L-ELA) segments. Constriction of the afferent filamental artery or uniform dilation of the ALA-L-ELA will decrease λ. As λ decreases, flow through the proximal (basal) lamellae greatly increases at the expense of distal lamellar perfusion. When λ increases in a system of finite length the flow profile must account for reflected pressures within the main vessel. The λ calculated from corrosion casts of gill vasculature is 14 to 12 the filament length. This favors blood flow through the proximal lamellae and when cardiac output increases, the proportion of cardiac output perfusing the proximal areas increases at the expense of distal lamellar blood flow. To offset these changes it is proposed that increased distal lamellar perfusion is achieved by simultaneous vasodilatation of distal and constriction of proximal ALA-L-ELA segments and dilation of the afferent filamental artery.  相似文献   

18.
This paper reports observations on the innervation of gill filaments of the lamprey, Lampetra japonica. Nerve fibers run on each side of the afferent filament artery (AFA nerve) and in the connective tissue compartment along the efferent filament artery (EFA nerve). The AFA nerve supplies vasomotor fibers to the afferent filament artery and arteriovenous anastomoses and special visceral motor fibers to branchial muscle fibers (musculus compressor branchialis circularis). Nerve endings of the vasomotor fibers contain large, cored vesicles (60–180 nm in diameter) with a variable number of small, clear vesicles (30–70 μm in diameter), whereas those of the visceral motor fibers have many small, clear vesicles with few large, cored vesicles. The EFA nerve supplies vasomotor fibers to the efferent filament artery. Their endings, containing mixtures of predominantly large, cored vesicles and small, clear vesicles make close synaptic contacts with reticular cells. The latter in turn are connected with each other or with smooth muscle cells in the wall of the efferent filament artery by nexuses. No nerves are found in the axial plate between the afferent and efferent filament arteries nor in the secondary lamellae of individual gill filaments. No afferent nerve supply to the gill filament has been found.  相似文献   

19.
Recent studies have shown that long-term in vivo exposure of dogs to neutral sulfur(IV)/sulfite aerosols induces mild inflammatory reactions, whereas the combination of neutral sulfite with acidic sulfur(VI)/sulfate aerosols evokes less pronounced effects. To understand underlying mechanisms, we studied in vitro the role of lipid mediators in the responses of alveolar macrophages (AMs) to sulfur-related compounds under neutral (pH 7) or moderate acidic (pH 6) conditions. Canine AMs incubated with sulfite at pH 7 released threefold higher amounts of platelet-activating factor than control (P < 0.005). Generation of arachidonic acid, leukotriene B4, 5-hydroxy-eicosatetraenoic acid, prostaglandin E2, thromboxane B2 and 12-hydroxyheptadecatrienoic acid increased twofold (P < 0.0005). However, these metabolites remained unchanged following incubation of AMs with sulfite at pH 6 or with sulfate at pH 7 or pH 6. Mediator release by sulfite-treated AMs at pH 7 stimulated respiratory burst activity of neutrophils. Inhibition of MAPK pathway by PD 98059, of cytosolic (cPLA2) and secretory phospholipases A2 by AACOCF3 and thioetheramide-PC, respectively, reduced sulfite-induced eicosanoid formation in AMs. Sulfite activated cPLA2 activity twofold at pH 7. This mechanism of sulfite-stimulated responses in phospholipid metabolism predicts that chronic exposure to sulfur(IV)/sulfite is associated with a considerable health risk.  相似文献   

20.
The branchial vascular anatomy of Urolophus mucosus and U. paucimaculatus was studied by scanning electron microscopical examination of critical-point-dried tissue or of vascular corrosion casts. The vasculature could be divided into arterioarterial and arteriovenous pathways, which channel the flow of blood through the gills. The arterioarterial pathway consists of an afferent branchial artery which gives rise to afferent distributing arteries that run through the tissues of the interbranchial septum and supply the afferent filament arteries of several filaments. Afferent filament arteries open regularly into a corpus cavernosum in the core of the filament; unlike other elasmobranchs no septal corpora cavernosa are found. At the tip of the filament, channels of the corpus cavernosum connect to a channel which passes across the distal end of the filament from afferent to efferent side. This channel always connects to the afferent filament artery, and in many filaments it connects to the efferent filament artery as well. In addition, a vascular arcade connects all the afferent filament arteries along the entire length of each hemibranch. The filament corpus cavernosum supplies the secondary lamellae. The lamellae drain into efferent lamellar arterioles which in turn drain into the efferent filament artery and the efferent branchial artery. The vascular anatomy of the arteriovenous pathway is similar to that described in other elasmobranchs and consists of arteriovenous anastomoses, found only arising from efferent arterial circulation, and the venolymphatic system, which is composed of the central venous sinus and the companion vessels.  相似文献   

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