Okajimas Folia Anatomica Japonica
Online ISSN : 1881-1736
Print ISSN : 0030-154X
ISSN-L : 0030-154X
A Scanning and Transmission Electron Microscopic Study of Fiber Arrangement in the Hepatic Capsule
Noriaki WATANABEHisanori NISHIZONO
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1994 Volume 71 Issue 5 Pages 279-295

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Abstract
The arrangement of fibrous elements in the rat hepatic capsule was examined under a scanning electron microscope (SEM) after alkaline or acid maceration of the serous coat, in conjunction with examination of the thin sections using a transmission electron microscope (TEM).
The elastic fibers appeared as thin threads in a densely meshed network, lying just beneath the serous coat. Their surface was granular with short rods in the materials fixed with paraformaldehyde. In contrast, the collagen fibers were observed as relatively thick threads, with fascicles of collagen fibrils that were uniform in size. These fascicles extended in various directions to form rough meshes that were traversed by small fascicles and anastomosed with each other.
The fibrous branches of the elastic fibers extended on or into the underlying collagen fibers to be anchored, while the collagen fibers converged on many areas of the liver surface, and were transferred into the interlobular connective tissues.
The findings of the present study thus suggest that the fiber arrangement plays an effective role in the mechanical protection of the fragile liver cells and delicate serous cells from pressure and friction damage by the neighboring abdominal organs and walls of the abdominal cavity due to the elastic mobility of the subserosal elastic network in addition to the possible slippery cushion of a serous layer on the serous cells.
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