1988
DOI: 10.1530/jrf.0.0820857
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The blood-uterine lumen barrier and exchange between extracellular fluids

Abstract: Summary. The concept of a blood-tissue barrier defines the rates at which matter exchanges among the vascular and extravascular fluids of the tissue. The remarkably slow rates at which substances such as mannitol ( M , 182) enter uterine fluid from plasma demonstrate the existence of a blood-uterine lumen barrier. Available evidence indicates that the uterine microvascular endothelium and the uterine epithelium behave as lipoid layers interrupted by water-filled channels. Furthermore, both cell layers appear t… Show more

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Cited by 30 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…the time when sows develop the syndrome (Middleton-Williams et al, 1977;Wegman, 1985). Sex hormones may also in¯uence the resistance to infections by changing the adherence ability of epithelial cells (Sobel and Kaye, 1986 2 ), the epithelium permeability (McRae, 1988) and the environment for the microbe, e.g. the composition of mammary secretions (Cowie, 1984).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…the time when sows develop the syndrome (Middleton-Williams et al, 1977;Wegman, 1985). Sex hormones may also in¯uence the resistance to infections by changing the adherence ability of epithelial cells (Sobel and Kaye, 1986 2 ), the epithelium permeability (McRae, 1988) and the environment for the microbe, e.g. the composition of mammary secretions (Cowie, 1984).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The uterine luminal environment is separated from the surrounding uterine tissue by a permeability barrier which exhibits complex behaviour towards blood-borne substances (McRae & Kennedy, 1981, 1983a and seems to function more broadly than the simple exclusion of certain substances from the uterine lumen (see McRae, 1984McRae, , 1988, for reviews). The composition of this environment at any given time will depend upon a balance between the influx and efflux of material across the luminal and glandular epithelia.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As a transporting and secretory epithelium, UEC regulate the ionic and macromolecular traffic between lumenal and stromal compartments, serving as a contributor and regulator of fluid phase contents in both compartments (McRae, 1988). As is true for many epithelia (Milks et al, 1983), leukocytes can penetrate the uterine epithelial layer without disrupting it; however, this cell movement occurs from the stromal compartment through to the uterine lumen (i.e., in a basal to apical direction) (Wilson and Potts, 1970).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%