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Histology of Mammary Glands

The breast consists of 15-25 lobes separated by connective tissue and adipose tissue. Each lobe contains lactiferous ducts that emerge in the nipple. Before puberty, the breasts are composed of lactiferous sinuses and ducts. During puberty in girls, the breasts enlarge due to increased estrogen and the growth and branching of lactiferous ducts. During pregnancy, hormones cause the proliferation of alveoli at the ends of ducts, which become milk-secreting structures during lactation. Milk is produced in the alveoli and accumulates in ducts. After lactation is complete, the gland reverts to its non-pregnant condition.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
344 views2 pages

Histology of Mammary Glands

The breast consists of 15-25 lobes separated by connective tissue and adipose tissue. Each lobe contains lactiferous ducts that emerge in the nipple. Before puberty, the breasts are composed of lactiferous sinuses and ducts. During puberty in girls, the breasts enlarge due to increased estrogen and the growth and branching of lactiferous ducts. During pregnancy, hormones cause the proliferation of alveoli at the ends of ducts, which become milk-secreting structures during lactation. Milk is produced in the alveoli and accumulates in ducts. After lactation is complete, the gland reverts to its non-pregnant condition.

Uploaded by

Alifah Syarafina
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Histology of Breast

Consists of 1525 lobes of the compound tubuloalveolar, function is to secrete milk to nourish newborns. Each lobe, separated from the others by dense connective tissue and much adipose tissue, is really a gland in itself with its own excretory lactiferous duct Excretory lactiferous duct, 24.5 cm long, emerge independently in the nipple, which has 1525 openings, each about 0.5 mm in diameter. The histological structure of the mammary glands varies according to sex, age, and physiological status.

Breast Development in Puberty & in the Adult


Before puberty, the mammary glands are composed of lactiferous sinuses and lactiferous ducts In girls during puberty, the breasts increase in size and develop a prominent nipple. In boys, the breasts remain flattened Breast enlargement is the result of the accumulation of adipose tissue and connective tissue, with increased growth and branching of lactiferous ducts due to an increase of ovarian estrogens The lobe is developed at the tips of the smallest ducts . A lobe consists of several ducts that empty into one terminal duct. Each lobe is embedded in loose connective tissue. A denser, less cellular connective tissue separates the lobes. The lactiferous sinuses are lined with stratified squamous epithelium. This epithelium very quickly changes to stratified columnar or cuboidal epithelium. The lactiferous ducts is formed of simple cuboidal epithelium covered by closely packed myoepithelial cells. The nipple has a conical shape and may be pink, light brown, or dark brown. Externally, it is covered by keratinized stratified squamous epithelium The epithelium of the nipple rests on a layer of connective tissue rich in smooth muscle fibers

The Breasts during Pregnancy & Lactation

The mammary glands undergo intense growth during pregnancy as a result of the synergistic action of several hormones, mainly estrogen, progesterone, prolactin, and human placental lactogen. One of the actions of these hormones is the proliferation of alveoli at the ends of the terminal ducts Alveoli are spherical collections of epithelial cells that become the active milk-secreting structures in lactation During lactation, milk is produced by the epithelial cells of the alveoli and accumulates in their lumens and inside the lactiferous ducts The secretory cells become small and low cuboidal, and their cytoplasm contains spherical droplets of various sizes containing mainly neutral triglycerides The amounts of connective tissue and adipose tissue, relative to the parenchyma, decrease considerably during lactation.

Changes in the mammary gland. A: In nonpregnant women, the gland is quiescent and undifferentiated, and its duct system is inactive. B: During pregnancy, alveoli proliferate at the ends of the ducts and prepare for the secretion of milk. C: During lactation, alveoli are fully differentiated, and milk secretion is abundant. Once lactation is completed, the gland reverts to the nonpregnant condition .

Secreting cells from the mammary gland. From left to right, note the accumulation and extrusion of lipids and proteins. The proteins are released through exocytosis

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