image
GALL BLADDER
Gall bladder. Historical illustration of a gall bladder (centre, blue). This organ receives and stores bile from the liver through the bile duct (lower centre and centre left) which drains the biliary ducts of the liver (seen in liver tissue at upper and lower left). The bile is released into the digestive tract to aid in fat digestion. The internal surface (centre right) of the gall bladder is shown with the columnar cells of this surface (lower right). The veins draining blood from three lobules of the liver are at upper right. The liver regulates blood chemistry. Colour lithograph by Fairland from The Viscera of the Human Body, 1840. Based on drawings by Bagg. (KEYSTONE/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY/SHEILA TERRY)
Instructions
COPYRIGHTPFLICHTIG
Licence
Rights Managed
Date de création
20010301
Lieu
Credit
KEYSTONE
Source
SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY SPL
Byline
SHEILA TERRY
Taille
3370 x 4200 px
Type de fichier
JPEG
GALL BLADDER LINING. LIGHT MICROGRAPH OF A SECTION THROUGH THE GALL BLADDER SHOWING THE FOLDS OF TALL COLUMNAR EPITHELIUM (ORANGE) OVERLYING A CONNECTIVE TISSUE (LIGHT PINK) AND MUSCLE (DARK PINK). MAGNIFICATION X100 WHEN PRINTED AT 10 CENTIMETRES WIDE.
STEVE GSCHMEISSNER
179715833
GALL BLADDER LINING. LIGHT MICROGRAPH OF A SECTION THROUGH THE GALL BLADDER SHOWING THE FOLDS OF TALL COLUMNAR EPITHELIUM (YELLOW) OVERLYING A CONNECTIVE TISSUE (LIGHT PINK) AND MUSCLE (DARK PINK). MAGNIFICATION X100 WHEN PRINTED AT 10 CENTIMETRES WIDE.
STEVE GSCHMEISSNER
179715828