Ganong's Review of Medical Physiology, 23rd Edition

(Chris Devlin) #1

394
SECTION IV
Endocrine & Reproductive Physiology


EMBRYOLOGY OF THE HUMAN


REPRODUCTIVE SYSTEM


Development of the Gonads


On each side of the embryo, a primitive gonad arises from the
genital ridge, a condensation of tissue near the adrenal gland.
The gonad develops a
cortex
and a
medulla.
Until the sixth
week of development, these structures are identical in both sex-
es. In genetic males, the medulla develops during the seventh
and eighth weeks into a testis, and the cortex regresses. Leydig


and Sertoli cells appear, and testosterone and MIS are secreted.
In genetic females, the cortex develops into an ovary and the
medulla regresses. The embryonic ovary does not secrete hor-
mones. Hormonal treatment of the mother has no effect on go-
nadal (as opposed to ductal and genital) differentiation in
humans, although it does in some experimental animals.

Embryology of the Genitalia
The embryology of the gonads is summarized in Figures 25–4
and 25–5. In the seventh week of gestation, the embryo has

FIGURE 25–4
Embryonic differentiation of male and female internal genitalia (genital ducts) from wolffian (male) and müllerian
(female) primordia.
(After Corning HK, Wilkins L. Redrawn and reproduced with permission from
Williams Textbook of Endocrinology,
7th ed. Wilson JD, Foster DW [editors].
Saunders,1985.)


Gubernaculum

Testis

Hydatid

Vaginal rudiment

Urethra

Prostate

Seminal
vesicle

Vas
deferens

Epididymis

MALE

Fimbria

Gonad

Gonadal ligament

Mullerian ligament:

Uterovaginal
canal

Bladder

Mesonephros

Wolffian duct

Urogenital sinus

INDIFFERENT

Epoophoron
Ovary

Uterine tube

Ovarian ligament

Uterus

Gartner’s duct

FEMALE
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