Morphologic characteristics of initial lymphatics of the healthy and diseased human gingiva

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Abstract

Investigation was performed on healthy and inflamed human gingivae. In the healthy mucosa lymphatic vessels generally appeared as flattened channels with a reduced lumen. Only in very inflamed tissue were some more evident vessels with a distended wall detectable. Ultrastructurally, most of the vessels had the characteristics of capillaries and they were delimited by a thin and irregular endothelial wall with large intercellular spaces. These observations indicate that in the gingival tissues, which are continuously exposed to inflammatory agents and need a really efficient draining system, the pathway of interstitial exudation and cell migration may include both the lymphatic vessel system and the intercellular spaces of the permeable junctional epithelium.

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Marchetti, C., Poggi, P., Cornaglia, A. I., Farina, A., & Rizzo, S. (1999). Morphologic characteristics of initial lymphatics of the healthy and diseased human gingiva. Anatomical Record, 255(2), 175–179. https://doi.org/10.1002/(SICI)1097-0185(19990601)255:2<175::AID-AR7>3.0.CO;2-T

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