PATHOLOGIC o\ \, \l.m\n RAT 



127 



of this rat ten blastodermic vesicles, two of which are repro- 

 duced in A and B of figure 24, Part I, as showing typically early 

 stages of the anlage of the ectoplacental cone and entypy of the 

 germ layers. The ovum shown in figure 5 is found in a decidual 

 crypt which is in very close proximity to the one containing the 

 vesicle figured under B of figure 24, Part I, the 1 wo crypl s being sep- 

 arated by a distance of approximately 1.3 nun., while the distance 

 between decidual crypts is normally 1 cm. to 1.5 cm. The de- 

 cidual crypt lodging the abnormal ovum presents a normal ap- 

 pearance, resembling very closely in form, depth and structure 



Fig. 6 Two ova of the albino rat, interpreted as evidencing retarded or 

 irregular formation of the segmentation cavity. X 200. A, rat No. 90, 6 days, 

 17 hours, after the beginning of insemination. B, rat No. 90, l> days. 17 hours, 

 after the beginning of insemination, p.ccl., parietal or transitory ectoderm; 

 y.ent., yolk entoderm; p.ent., parietal entoderm. 



of the surrounding decidua, the crypt and decidua enclosing the 

 adjacent normal vesicle figured in B of figure 24, Part I. The 

 abnormal ovum in question appeared to have proceeded nor- 

 mally in segmentation, its constituent cells being of about the 

 size and structure of the cells of normal vesicles taken the early 

 part of the seventh day after insemination. The cell-mass (Mi- 

 closes a relatively small cavity which may be regarded as an ab- 

 normally placed segmentation cavity, in that its position is not 

 eccentric, and that it is surrounded on all sides by more than one 

 layer of cells. There is thus no differentiation of floor and roof 

 as in normal blastodermic vesicles, and no development of ecto- 

 placental cone and egg-cylinder as in the other ova obtained from 



