1. The anatomy of the cremaster muscle during inguinoscrotal testicular descent in the rat
- Author
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Angelika F. Na, Natalie S. Shenker, Efrant J. Harnaen, Magdy Sourial, Pamela J. Farmer, Bridget R. Southwell, and John M. Hutson
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.drug_class ,Inguinal Canal ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Flutamide ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Masson's trichrome stain ,Random Allocation ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Pregnancy ,Reference Values ,Cryptorchidism ,Testis ,Scrotum ,medicine ,Animals ,Myocyte ,Abdominal Muscles ,Spermatic Cord ,Gubernaculum ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Anatomy ,Androgen ,Rats ,Disease Models, Animal ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Animals, Newborn ,chemistry ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Cremaster muscle ,Female ,Surgery ,Desmin ,business - Abstract
Background Extrapolation of rat testicular descent studies to humans has been criticized because of anatomical differences of the cremaster muscle. Human cremaster is described as a thin strip rather than a large, complete sac as in rats, which is proposed to be more important in propelling the testis during descent. This study investigated cremaster muscle anatomy and ontogeny in both normal and cryptorchid rat models. Methods Gubernacula from 4 groups of neonatal rats were sectioned longitudinally and transversely: normal Sprague-Dawley, capsaicin pretreated, flutamide pretreated, and congenital cryptorchid rats. Gubernacula were stained with hematoxylin-eosin, Masson trichrome, and desmin immunohistochemistry to study muscle development. Results Myoblasts are more numerous at the gubernacular tip, whereas the most differentiated muscle is proximal. Rat cremaster develops as an elongated strip rather than a complete sac derived from abdominal wall muscles. Flutamide and capsaicin pretreatment disrupts development. Conclusion Rat cremaster muscle develops as a strip, bearing close resemblance to human cremaster muscle, permitting extrapolation of cremaster function to human testicular descent. The cremaster muscle appears to differentiate from the gubernacular tip during elongation to the scrotum, and requires intact sensory innervation and androgen.
- Published
- 2007
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