Abstract

Tissue specimens of nine normal human pancreata from fetuses, neonates, and adults were subjected to serial sectioning and computer-assisted three-dimensional (3-D) reconstruction in an effort to study the growth of Langerhans' islets based on their distribution in the lobule and their relationship with the ducts and arterioles. Also, islet volumes were obtained by 3-D morphometry. In 24-week-old fetuses, the islets were shown to be in direct contact with the ducts, whereas in the neonates, they gradually became separated from the ducts, finally dispersing throughout the lobule in the adults. This transition seemed to allow islet hormones to have physiological effects on the exocrine function of the acinar tissue, making the pancreas achieve the endocrine-exocrine correlation. However, half of the islets remained next to the ducts even in the adult pancreata. With regard to the relationship between the islets and arterioles, "arteriolar" islets having an afferent arteriole accounted for approximately 20% in number, but their volume cumulated to approximately 70% of the total, comprising a greater part of the pancreatic endocrine gland.

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