Mesodermic

Word MESODERMIC
Character 10
Hyphenation mes o der mic
Pronunciations N/A

Definitions and meanings of "Mesodermic"

What do we mean by mesodermic?

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word mesodermic. Define mesodermic, mesodermic synonyms, mesodermic pronunciation, mesodermic translation, English dictionary definition of mesodermic.

Synonyms and Antonyms for Mesodermic

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The word "mesodermic" in example sentences

The vessels of the villus are surrounded by a thin layer of mesoderm consisting of gelatinous connective tissue, which is covered by two strata of ectodermal cells derived from the trophoblast: the deeper stratum, next the mesodermic tissue, represents the cytotrophoblast or layer of Langhans; the superficial, in contact with the maternal blood, the syncytiotrophoblast (Figs. 36 and 37). ❋ Unknown (1918)

Every feather is in fact an open wound, and is perhaps the only other case, in addition to that of the antlers of stags, in which vascular mesodermic tissue is normally shed in such considerable quantities. ❋ J. T. Cunningham (1897)

This papilla consists of vascular dermal, _i. e._ mesodermic tissue, and if the feather is pulled out during growth bleeding occurs. ❋ J. T. Cunningham (1897)

On the other hand, all the membranous, cartilaginous, and osseous coverings of the labyrinth are formed from the mesodermic head-plates. ❋ Ernst Heinrich Philipp August Haeckel (1876)

Groups of sensitive nerve cells separate from the ordinary epidermic cells; they retire into the more protected tissue of the mesodermic under-skin, and form special neural ganglia there. ❋ Ernst Heinrich Philipp August Haeckel (1876)

The sexual glands develop originally from the two promesoblasts or primitive mesodermic cells ❋ Ernst Heinrich Philipp August Haeckel (1876)

The vegetal entoderm that lined their simple gut-cavity served for nutrition; the ciliated ectoderm that formed the external skin attended to locomotion and sensation; finally, the two primitive mesodermic cells, that lay to the right and left at the ventral border of the primitive mouth, were sexual cells, and effected reproduction. ❋ Ernst Heinrich Philipp August Haeckel (1876)

As these earliest mesodermic structures extended, and became spacious sexual pouches in the later descendants of the ❋ Ernst Heinrich Philipp August Haeckel (1876)

But, besides these mesodermic cells of the "vascular layer" proper, other travelling cells, of which the origin and purport are still obscure, take part in the formation of blood in the meroblastic ❋ Ernst Heinrich Philipp August Haeckel (1876)

The various parts of the corium arise by division of labour from the originally homogeneous cells of the cutis-plate, the outermost lamina of the mesodermic skin-fibre layer ❋ Ernst Heinrich Philipp August Haeckel (1876)

The false bladder of the fishes is a mesodermic product of the nephroducts; the true bladder of the Dipneusts, Amphibia, and Amniotes is an entodermic blind sac of the rectum. ❋ Ernst Heinrich Philipp August Haeckel (1876)

A section through the embryo in the hatched hen's egg towards the close of the first day of incubation shows in the middle of the dorsal surface a broad ectodermic medullary groove (Figure 1.92 Rf), and underneath the middle of the chorda (ch) and at each side of it a couple of broad mesodermic layers (sp). ❋ Ernst Heinrich Philipp August Haeckel (1876)

The recent investigations of Ruckert and Van Wijhe on the mesodermic segments of the trunk and the excretory system of the selachii show that these "primitive fishes" are closely related to the amphioxus in this further respect. ❋ Ernst Heinrich Philipp August Haeckel (1876)

The number increases as the embryo grows and extends backwards, and new cells are formed constantly (at the primitive mouth) from the two primitive mesodermic cells (Figures 1.159 to 1.160). ❋ Ernst Heinrich Philipp August Haeckel (1876)

Medical opinion states them as a mesodermic tissue-damage and consequent pits and scars. ❋ Unknown (2008)

And when the articulation of the somites begins in the sole-shaped embryonic shield, and a couple of protovertebrae are developed in succession, constantly increasing in number towards the rear, these cube-shaped somites (formerly called protovertebrae, or primitive vertebrae) have the appearance of solid dice, made up of mesodermic cells (Figure ❋ Ernst Heinrich Philipp August Haeckel (1876)

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