Abstract

Lungs from eight goats of mixed sexes and breeds (Cashmere, Nubian and Toggenburg) aged between 10 and 48 months were used in this study. Tissues from lung parenchyma were minced and routinely prepared for transmission electron microscopy ( TEM) after using different methods of fixation. Thick sections were examined With a light microscope and samples, to include terminal bronchioles, respiratory bronchioles, alveolar ducts and alveolar membrane, were selected for ultrathin sectioning. Six cell types, ciliated, non-ciliated bronchiolar epithelial, mucus-producing, alveolar Type 1, alveolar Type 11 and capillary endothelial cell were identified and characterised cytologically. It Was established that the cell population in the distal airways is similar to that observed in other domestic mammals. The mucus-producing cell, which appears to be a common cell type in the distal airways of man and Rhesus monkey, was encountered particularly in adult goats in the present study. This study has also established that the Clara cell of the goat shows some cytological differences from those of some other mammalian species by having a large amount of SER, particularly in the apical region. Lipid vacuoles were seen to be a feature of the alveolar Type II cells; these do not appear to have been reported in other mammalian species. The study has provided a basic understanding of the morphological features of the cell population of the epithelium lining the distal airways in the goat's respiratory tract. The difference in junctional complexes between the various alveolar epithelial cells perhaps signify a different pattern of intercellular transport, thus influencing the pathogenesis and resolution of alveolar pulmonary edema.

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