Abstract

The ultrastructure of the paracervical (Frankenhauser) ganglion in the rat was studied after immersion or perfusion fixation with glutaraldehyde followed by post-osmification. This ganglion is located at the uterovaginal junction in the vicinity of arteria uterina and contains three neuronal cell types. (1) Principal neurons have a fine structure mainly similar to the ganglion cells of other autonomic ganglia. (2) Small granule-containing cells occur in clusters often close to fenestrated capillaries. They are divided into two subgroups according to the size of their cytoplasmic granules; those containing only “small” granulated vesicles of 800 to 1400 A in diameter and those having also “large” granulated vesicles of 2000 to 3000 A in diameter. (3) Vacuolated nerve cells are large cells that resemble the principal neurons in their cytoplasmic components, except that they contain one to ten vacuoles with corpuscles of different size and shape. The possible physiological significance of the small, granule-containing cells in the uterine function is discussed.

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