Archivum histologicum japonicum
Print ISSN : 0004-0681
Effects of Estrogen and Progesterone on the Spleen of the Mouse: A Light and Electron Microscopic Study
Kazunobu SASAKITakashi ITO
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1981 Volume 44 Issue 3 Pages 203-213

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Abstract

The effects of estrogen and progesterone on the spleen of gonadectomized male mice were studied by means of quantitative methods.
Estrogen caused an increase in the weight of the spleen. The splenic pulps, red and white, were significantly enlarged, and particularly the red pulp was found to be markedly increased in volume. In the red pulp of the control, erythroid cells were most numerous in the various hemopoietic cell lines. Estrogen caused a further increase of erythroid cells, and erythroblasts underwent a two-fold increase in number. By stereological analysis using electron microscopy, erythroblasts could be classified into three categories in nuclear and cell sizes: small, medium and large. Large and medium erythroblasts were three to four times as numerous in the estrogen-treated group as in the control.
The white pulp did not show any histological changes following estrogen injection, and progesterone exerted almost no influence upon the splenic pulps.

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