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Near the medulla is located an area known as hilum.
On a bean seed, the hilum is called the "eye".
The concave side of the lymph node is called the hilum.
Enlargement of the hilum is common with chronic and accelerated silicosis.
The pulmonary ligament droops down from the hilum of the lung.
The lungs are mobile in the chest cavity but their movement is more restricted near the hilum.
They have a prominent whitish hilum which distinguishes the species from related genera.
It presents near its medial border a long fissure, termed the hilum.
The Splenic hilum is a location on the surface of the spleen.
It passes anterior to the hilum of the corresponding lung, and therefore can be identified easily.
The hilum is where the connection between the mediastinum and the pleural cavities meet.
The plural of the medical word hilum.
Seed is oval with a light hilum.
The area around the hilum is called "perihilar".
"The injury is in the hilum.
Structures that enter (or leave) the hilum are:
The hilum of each kidney is a little below it, while its left end approximately touches the lower limit of the spleen.
A hilum can also be a nucleus of a starch grain; the point around which layers of carbohydrate are deposited.
This fissure is named the hilum, and transmits the vessels, nerves, and ureter.
The point of attachment of the seed in the capsule (hilum) shows as a large circular whitish scar.
The roughly spherical to ellipsoid spores are typically 6.0-7.5 by 5.0-6.0 m, and feature a hilum.
These cords run together toward the future hilum and form a network that ultimately becomes the rete testis.
The hilum is linear and is 1 lengh of the caryopsis.
At operation a large, hard mass surrounding the pancreatic head with extensive infiltration of the hilum of the liver was noted.
The left lung is then easily accessible and can be removed by cutting the bronchus, artery, and vein at the hilum.
Instead of entering the kidney at the hilus, they usually pierce the upper or lower part of the organ.
CA3c is the most proximal to the dentate, inserting into the hilus.
Little or no anastomosis occurs between the superficial and deep lymphatics of the lungs, except in the region of the hilus.
The lower of the two pulmonary veins, is situated below the bronchus, at the apex or lowest part of the hilus.
The fascia dentata and the hilus together make up the dentate gyrus.
It receives feedback connections from mossy cells in the hilus at distant levels in the septal and temporal directions.
In human anatomy, the hilum (formerly called a hilus) is a depression or fissure where structures such as blood vessels and nerves enter an organ.
The emboliform nucleus lies immediately to the medial side of the nucleus dentatus, and partly covering its hilus.
A hilum (adjective form: hilar; plural hila), formerly called a hilus, can refer to:
Its principal neurons are tiny granule cells which give rise to unmyelinated axons called the mossy fibers which project to the hilus and CA3.
The subgranular zone is a narrow layer of cells located between the granule cell layer and hilus of the dentate gyrus.
Horizontal astrocytes do not have radial processes; rather, they extend their processes horizontally, parallel to the border between the hilus and the SGZ.
Microscopy of the brain samples showed moderate to severe pyramidal neuronal loss and reactive gliosis in CA1, CA3 and the dentate hilus.
The one near the dorsal aspect of the hilus of the inferior olivary nucleus is called the Sublingual nucleus (inferior central nucleus, nucleus of Roller.)
The dentate gyrus contains the fascia dentata and the hilus, while CA is differentiated into fields CA1, CA2, CA3, and CA4.
Next, dentate precursor cells move out of this same area of the hippocampal neuroepithelium and, retaining their mitotic capacity, invade the hilus (core) of the forming dentate gyrus.
The axons emerge from the basal portions of the granule cells and pass through the hilus (or polymorphic cell layer) of the dentate gyrus before entering the stratum lucidum of CA3.
Walthard cell rests; sometimes called Walthard cell nests, are a benign cluster of epithelial cells most commonly found in the connective tissue of the Fallopian tubes, but also seen in the mesovarium, mesosalpinx and ovarian hilus.
Preoperative assessment that includes 3-phase helical computed tomography and/or magnetic resonance scanning should be directed toward determining the presence of extension of tumor across interlobar planes, involvement of the hepatic hilus, or encroachment on the vena cava.
At the root of the lung, the superior pulmonary vein lies in front of and a little below the pulmonary artery; the inferior is situated at the lowest part of the hilus of the lung and on a plane posterior to the upper vein.
Before reaching the hilus of the kidney, each artery divides into four or five branches; the greater number of these (anterior branches) lie between the renal vein and ureter, the vein being in front, the ureter behind, but one or more branches (posterior branches) are usually situated behind the ureter.
The superficial efferents turn around the borders of the lungs and the margins of their fissures, and converge to end in some glands situated at the hilus; the deep efferents are conducted to the hilus along the pulmonary vessels and bronchi, and end in the tracheobronchial lymph nodes.