Affiliation:
1. Department of Clinical Engineering Faculty of Health Sciences Komatsu University Komatsu Japan
2. Department of Integrative Cancer Therapy and Urology Kanazawa University Graduate School of Medical Science Kanazawa Japan
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundDue to the scarcity of studies using human tissues, the limited information is currently available on the gross structure of the caput epididymis in humans, at which efferent ducts connect to the epididymal duct.ObjectiveThe present study investigated the three‐dimensional structures of efferent and caput epididymal ducts in humans, with a focus on junctions between the former and the latter.Materials and methodsWe examined three sets of human efferent and caput epididymal ducts in specimens obtained from prostatic carcinoma patients. They were reconstructed from serial paraffin sections using a segmentation model created by a deep learning protocol and high‐performance three‐dimensional reconstruction software.ResultsSerial sections and three‐dimensional images of human efferent and caput epididymal ducts were combined to obtain the detailed anatomical information. When a single efferent duct was defined as a duct connecting to both the extra‐testicular rete testis and epididymal duct, there were 14.7 efferent ducts with a total length of 3.0 m per specimen on average. The cranial portion of the efferent ducts joined to a single duct and terminated at the end of the epididymal duct, whereas other efferent ducts terminated independently on the side of the epididymal duct. These two types of junctions between the efferent and epididymal ducts differed in the patterns of the epithelial‐type switch. The epididymal duct consisted of multiple segments, which were separated by a minimal amount of connective tissue septa or even without them. Efferent ducts occupied most of the volume of the caput epididymis.Discussion and conclusionsBy utilizing deep learning, we reconstructed human efferent and caput epididymal ducts and revealed their precise three‐dimensional structures, which differed from those of rodents in several aspects. The present results may be useful for analyzing anatomical abnormalities related to some types of male infertility.
Funder
Japan Society for the Promotion of Science
Takeda Science Foundation
Kato Memorial Bioscience Foundation
Subject
Urology,Endocrinology,Reproductive Medicine,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism
Cited by
2 articles.
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