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Embryology of urogenital system

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mesonephric duct
pair of excretory ducts of the middle kidneys of an embryo
paramesonephric duct
paired ducts in the embryo in the primitive urogenital structures
urachus
The urachus forms from the distal end of the allantois in the embryo, and develops into a closed cord between the base of the bladder, and the navel. It drains the bladder of the fetus that joins and runs within the umbilical cord. The fibrous remnant lies in the space of Retzius, between the transverse fascia anteriorly and the peritoneum posteriorly. At birth, the urachus develops into the median umbilical ligament.
mesonephros
The mesonephros () is one of three excretory organs that develop in vertebrates. It serves as the main excretory organ of aquatic vertebrates and as a temporary kidney in reptiles, birds, and mammals. The mesonephros is also known as the Wolffian body after Caspar Friedrich Wolff who described it in 1759. (The Wolffian body is composed of: mesonephros + paramesonephrotic blastema)
genital tubercle
part of an embryo
pronephros
Pronephros is the most basic of the three excretory organs that develop in vertebrates, corresponding to the first stage of kidney development. It is succeeded by the mesonephros, which in fish and amphibians remains as the adult kidney. In amniotes, the mesonephros is the embryonic kidney and a more complex metanephros acts as the adult kidney. Once a more advanced kidney forms, the previous version typically degenerates by apoptosis or becomes part of the male reproductive system.
Definitive urogenital sinus
a part of the human body only present in the development of the urinary and reproductive organs
vaginal septum
human disease
list of homologues of the human reproductive system
Wikimedia list article
development of the urinary and reproductive organs
mechanisms that form the urinary system
vaginal anomaly
congenital defect; abnormal or absent vagina
labioscrotal swelling
paired structures in the human embryo that represent the final stage of development of the caudal end of the external genitals before sexual differentiation
gubernaculum
The paired gubernacula (from Ancient Greek κυβερνάω = pilot, steer), also called the caudal genital ligament, are embryonic structures which begin as undifferentiated mesenchyme attaching to the caudal end of the gonads (testicles in males and ovaries in females).
Gonadal ridge
developmental precursor to the gonads in an embryo
Nephrotome
In earlier conceptions of kidney biology, the nephrotome was a section of the mesoderm that gives rise to the pronephros and eventually to the rest of the kidney. Older texts describe the pronephros as forming through the fusion of multiple nephrotomes.
Processus vaginalis
embryonic developmental outpouching of the parietal peritoneum
development of the reproductive system
mechanisms that form the reproductive system
Template:Development of the reproductive system
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