Genitourinary system
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Genitourinary system
This journal of Surgical Pathology and Diagnosis (JSPD) is an peer reviewing processing journal and publishes the articles on immunohistochemistry, cytopathology techniques, molecular diagnostics such as DNA/ RNA analysis for detection of infectious agents and discussion on advanced surgical treatments are also welcome.
Journal of Surgical Pathology and Diagnosis is an open access journal and celebrating the 10thAnniversary, an esteemed journal which mainly deals with macroscopic and microscopic examination of surgical specimens for effective diagnosis of disease. Surgical specimens are of two categories, biopsies, and surgical resections.
The genitourinary system, or urogenital system, are the organs of the reproductive system and the urinary system.[1] These are grouped together because of their proximity to each other, their common embryological origin and the use of common pathways, like the male urethra. Also, because of their proximity, the systems are sometimes imaged together.[2]
The term "apparatus urogenitalis" was used in Nomina Anatomica (under Splanchnologia) but is not used in the current Terminologia Anatomica.
Development
The urinary and reproductive organs are developed from the intermediate mesoderm. The permanent organs of the adult are preceded by a set of structures that are purely embryonic and that, with the exception of the ducts, disappear almost entirely before the end of fetal life. These embryonic structures are on either side: the pronephros, the mesonephros and the metanephros of the kidney, and the Wolffian and Müllerian ducts of the sex organ. The pronephros disappears very early; the structural elements of the mesonephros mostly degenerate, but the gonad is developed in their place, with which the Wolffian duct remains as the duct in males, and the Müllerian as that of the female. Some of the tubules of the mesonephros form part of the permanent kidney.
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