1945
DOI: 10.1111/j.1471-0528.1945.tb07645.x
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The Relation of the Theca‐Cells to Disturbances of the Menstrual Cycle

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1948
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Cited by 10 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…T h e corpus luteum disappears rapidly after parturition. Culiner (1945Culiner ( , 1946 finds that the theca interna cells undergo changes similar to those of lutealization, both in atretic and cystic follicles. They may give rise to theca luteal cysts and 'yellow bodies', which resemble corpus luteum cysts and corpora lutea respectively.…”
Section: -2mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…T h e corpus luteum disappears rapidly after parturition. Culiner (1945Culiner ( , 1946 finds that the theca interna cells undergo changes similar to those of lutealization, both in atretic and cystic follicles. They may give rise to theca luteal cysts and 'yellow bodies', which resemble corpus luteum cysts and corpora lutea respectively.…”
Section: -2mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…On other occasions, however, the theca cells in regressing follicles may become vefy prominent whilst the granulosa cells are degenerating. In the non-pregnant individual theca cell luteinization around atretic follicles in co-existence with a corpus luteum-although it does occur and may be associated with varied endometrial responses as will be described in a subsequent paper-is rather infrequent and of limited extent (Culiner, 1945): in the THE OVARIAN THECA CELL pregnant individual, however, it is not an uncommon occurrence. It would appear, therefore, that these z cells are capable of independent response and that at times they are required to function together and at other times individually for the general economy of the body and particularly its sex aspect.…”
mentioning
confidence: 94%
“…Whereas in the corpus luteum of menstruation the thecs cell is only dominant in the early stages of development and then regresses with the evolution of the granulosa cell into the lutein cell, in the corpus luteum of pregnancy the paralutein changes in the theca are often rather conspicuous (Novak, 1947). In the developing follicle these two cells may either grow concurrently or on occasions, as described by Culiner (1945), a large number of follicles may ripen, attain maximal size, regress and disappear without any visible alteration of the surrounding theca cells.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%