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Names: ______________________________________________ Case#________ ______________________________________________ Tray#________ FETAL PIG DISSECTION Background: Pigs are mammals in the order Artiodactyla, along with animals such as cows and deer. The fetal pigs we use are byproducts of the pork meat-processing industry and would have been thrown away if not used for labs such as ours. Our choice of study animal is of particular interest because it retains some fetal attributes, such as 1) modifications to the circulatory system to facilitate gas and nutrient exchange with the mother and 2) immature stages of the reproductive anatomy. Safety and Clean up: Wear gloves, apron, and goggles throughout lab and clean up. It is advisable to wear closed toed shoes, too. Scalpels are sharp!! Be extra careful when cleaning the scalpel. You and your partner are responsible for keeping the dissection tools and tray clean! You are to use your assigned tools and tray and keep them clean. I will check tools and trays randomly and if they are not clean you will lose points. The dissecting tools must be washed and dried so they don’t rust. The scalpel blade might rust anyway. Obtain a new one if necessary. Make sure you store your fetal pig in its plastic bag with the top of the bag twisted and rubber banded. This will help keep the smell down and prevent your pig from drying out. Keep your pig in the assigned box each time. You must do a very careful dissection to see the structures and organs in this lab. It is easy to crush or accidently remove important structures before you realize what they are. Avoid this by reading instructions completely before proceeding, looking at diagrams provided, and not cutting any more than necessary- use the blunt probe, forceps, and needle whenever you can, then scissors. Use the scalpel only as a last resort. External Features, Planes, and directions: Directional Terms: left and right anterior (cranial) posterior (caudal) superior inferior dorsal ventral medial lateral proximal distal stated relative to the subject, not relative to people viewing it towards the front (head) of the animal towards the back (tail) of the animal higher on the subject- typically used on bipeds such humans lower on subject- also used on subjects such as humans towards the back towards the belly towards the mid-sagittal section away from the mid-sagittal section towards the mid-sagittal section along a limb away from the mid-sagittal section along a limb External features: Observe your pig carefully and be able to identify structures. Know which part is dorsal, caudal and so on because this will help you find structures and dissect properly. ____Pinna: external ear ____Nares: nostrils ____Eyes: closed, upper and lower lids ____Anus: exterior, posterior, opening to the digestive tract ____Umbilical cord: connected fetus to placenta while in uterus ____Mammary papillae: nipples, on ventral surface on either side of umbilical cord ____Urogenital opening: where urine exits body Measurement, age, sex: Estimate gestational age (time from conception) of pig by measuring length from tip of snout to base of tail. __________________________ cm 10 weeks 14 weeks 15 weeks 16 weeks 17 weeks = = = = = ~18cm ~20cm ~22cm ~28cm ~30cm ________________________ approximate gestational age The sex of the pig can be determined from external structures. Both males and females have mammary papillae or nipples on the ventral surface so that cannot be used to determine sex. In both sexes the anus is located just beneath the tail. However, the urogenital opening varies between the sexes and that is how sex is determined. Urogenital opening: Males: posterior to where the umbilical cord attaches to the belly. This is the orifice from which the male will urinate and is also where the penis (normally held internally under the skin posterior to the opening) protrudes when erect. The male also has scrotal sacs anteroventral to the anus. The loose flaps of skin will contain the testes from just before birth through adulthood. Females: urogenital papilla just anteroventral to the anus, from which she would urinate. This is also the opening to her reproductive tract. Sex of your fetal pig is _______________________ *****Examine a pig of the opposite sex!!******* Be sure you can identify a male or female pig from external structures! Umbilical Cord: contains blood vessels that connected fetus to the placenta of the mother. Examine the cut end of the cord. You should be able to see two arteries and a vein. Sometimes the vein is collapsed and difficult to see. Use your scissors to make a fresh cut though the cord about 1 cm from the body and see if the vein is more visible. Draw a cross section of the umbilical cord below. . The umbilical vein travels directly down into the body cavity, while the umbilical arteries travel posteriorly, staying associated with the body wall. The lungs do not function in the embryonic mammal. Instead, all gas and nutrient exchange occurs at the placenta. Although it has been removed from your fetal pig, the placenta is a part of the embryo (not the mother), and is a large, pancake-shaped structure at the terminus of the umbilical cord. The blood of the mother and embryo do not normally mix, but are very close together and diffusion is rapid. The umbilical vein carries nutrient-laden, oxygenated blood back to the embryo, and the umbilical arteries bring deoxygenated, nutrient-depleted blood to the placenta. Note that usually this is the other way around: most arteries carry oxygenated blood, while veins carry deoxygenated. Feet: Examine the feet. How many toes does the pig have? _______________. To keep the pig positioned properly in the tray tie a different piece of string around the “wrist” or “ankle” of each leg of the pig. Position the pig dorsal side down and ventral side up. Wrap each string around the plastic pegs on the dissecting trays. Pull the cord fairly tight so that the legs are spread apart but not so tightly that the skin is damaged. When you remove your pig from the tray each day, just unwrap the string from the pegs. Don’t untie the string! Beginning the Dissection Make a small incision with the scalpel through the skin just anterior (cranial) to the umbilical cord, just big enough that you can insert a pair of scissors (rounded blade beneath the skin). See Figure 2, the large dot near umbilicus. Now cut the skin midsagittally and anteriorly to a point just behind the small, hairy papilla on the upper part of the throat. This is the “hair on its chinny, chin, chin”. Note that the tough skin is relatively thin so If you are trying to cut into something stiff and hard (bone) or brown and fibrous (muscle), you are cutting too deeply. Continue your incision in the posterior direction by going around the umbilical cord, missing it by a cm or so to either side, making a pair of incisions, about two cm apart, back to either side of the anus, making sure to always stay at least two cm apart. The bladder is under here. If this is done right, you will have created a flap that includes the umbilical cord and a swath of skin and body wall running back towards the anus. Before you deepen the incision, consider the structure of what’s inside. The internal organs are only loosely held within the body cavities inside the body wall. There are three such body cavities: the abdominal cavity, the largest, containing most of the organs; the pleural cavity, which houses the lungs; and the pericardial cavity, which contains the heart. Each cavity is lined with tissue called serous membrane. The abdominal cavity is lined with parietal peritoneum. Each organ is covered with visceral peritoneum. A small amount of fluid between the layers allows them to slip against one another so that they don’t bind together. At times there are bands of tissue linking the organs to one another, or to the body wall. These extensions of the peritoneum are called mesenteries. Deepen the incision from the initial large dot up to where we will make the incision at line 2. The diaphragm is just under here and we do NOT want to cut through it just yet. Put your finger into the deepened incision and feel for the diaphragm or end of the ribs, then make the incision indicated by line 2. Finally make the cuts indicated by line 3. Slowly deepen the cuts in the abdominal area. If you are very careful, you will cut through muscle and then see the peritoneum. Our goal is to be able to pull back the skin flaps of the body wall along the long incision between the front and hind legs. Do NOT lift the flap with the umbilical cord!! As you separate the flaps under the front legs you may need to use scissors or a scalpel to carefully cut the edges of the diaphragm at the body wall so the flap can be pulled back. Drain or sponge any fluid inside with paper towels. Be careful!! It might be easier to proceed if you use dissecting pins to keep these flaps open. Now carefully pull up slightly on the flap with the umbilical cord. You will see the umbilical vein extending from inside the umbilicus up through the liver and toward the head. Pull up gently and cut the umbilical vein. After cutting the vein, leave the flap extending back between the hind legs. See Figure 3 below. Abdomen and digestive organs: The organs of the abdominal cavity are covered by the peritoneum, a serous membrane. Chances are you pulled the peritoneum off the abdominal cavity when you pulled the flaps of the body wall to the side. *****Find the peritoneum._________ Much of the upper part of the abdomen is covered by the liver, while the lower part is filled by the intestines. The liver processes blood as it leaves the digestive system, and also produces bile. Bile contains emulsifiers, a chemical that reduces the surface tension of fats, making them more digestible. Bile is stored in the gall bladder prior to use. You can see the gall bladder attached to the underside of the right lobe of the liver. You should also note that the umbilical vein ties into the vascular system at the liver. *****Find the liver. _________ How many lobes does it have? ____________ The liver is attached to the diaphragm by a thin cordlike structure called the round ligament_______. Attached to the round ligament is a thin sheet of tissue called the falciform ligament. ___________ *****Find the gall bladder. ________ Describe the appearance, color, shape_______________________ ____________________________________________________ Using forceps and a needle carefully remove the visceral peritoneum from the gall bladder and trace the duct from the gall bladder. Where does it enter the digestive tract? _____________________________ Lift up the liver to find the stomach. You might have to cut some portions of the liver to reveal the stomach. Cut off only one small lobe of the liver if possible. The long, flat pinkish organ that lies along the outer curve of the stomach is the spleen; it is for erythrocyte storage and processing and is part of the immune system.. *****Find the spleen ____________ *****Find the stomach ____________ Examine the stomach thoroughly. *****Find the junction of the stomach and the esophagus. ______ This is the lower esophageal sphincter. Be able to identify: greater curvature of the stomach__________, lesser curvature of the stomach_______, fundus______, body_______, pylorus______. *****Find the junction of the stomach and the small intestine.______. This is the pyloric sphincter. Cut open the stomach along the greater curvature to expose the sphincters and the inside of the stomach. Use a scalpel to make the initial opening and then use scissors. Be careful not to damage organs attached to stomach. The stomach is filled with a thick liquid which you must clean out with paper towels. Do you think this is food? ___________ Why?_________________________________________________________ (The greenish, brown debris found in the stomach and else where in the digestive tract is meconium. It consists of bile, mucus, and sloughed off skin and epithelial cells of digestive tract. During fetal life this material is discharged into the amniotic fluid that surrounds the embryo. It is swallowed by the fetus via the mouth to practice eating and digesting. The first bowel movement of a new born is called the meconium.) Once you have opened and cleaned the stomach you should be able to see the lower esophageal sphincter_______, the pyloric sphincter_______, and the rugae______, folds which allow for expansion of the stomach. Carefully lift up the stomach and in the mesentery between the lesser curvature of the stomach and the small intestine and you should see the pancreas__________. It is a whitish, granular organ, very flat, that has two lobes. It is involved with digestive enzymes and hormone production. The greater part of the gland is located behind the stomach. The pancreatic duct goes from the pancreas to the small intestine. It is very difficult to see, but try to find it. Now we will examine the intestines. There are two major portions to the intestine, the small intestine ___________and the large intestine_____________, or colon. They are named based on their diameter differences, not on length. The small intestine is a long, coiled tube, divided into three (3) regions: the duodenum, jejunum, and ileum. The anterior, curved, and relatively short, portion of the small intestine leaving the stomach is the duodenum. *****Find the duodenum ____________ The two remaining, approximately equal portions of the small intestine, the jejunum and the ileum, have no readily distinguishable boundary. The jejunum is the middle region of the small intestine, and the ileum is the part that attaches to the large intestine. *****Find the jejunum ____________ ileum ______________ Spread apart some of the coils of the small intestine and note the mesentery____________. It is a double layered membrane that holds the intestines in place. Blood vessels and nerves run through the mesentery. These blood vessels are part of the hepatic portal circulation. All the veins from the stomach, pancreas, and intestines drain into the hepatic portal vein_________ which empties into the liver. View portions of the interior of the small intestine. Using a scalpel, make a small longitudinal cut through part of the duodenum and jejunum. Clean the meconium carefully. Notice that the interior has a velvety texture. This is the villi________. Trace the ileum to its point of attachment with the large intestine (colon). There you can find a blind pouch called the cecum____________. In many animals, the cecum assists with digestion. In humans, the remnant of the cecum is called the appendix. The first part of the large intestine in the pig is called the spiral colon________. It is visible as a compact, coiled mass on the left side of the abdominal cavity. The posterior portion of the large intestine is the rectum __________. Locate this structure passing from the spiral colon as a straight tube into the pelvic cavity. Recall that the external opening of the rectum is the anus_______ Cut the cecum where it joins the ileum in a manner similar to the way you cut the small intestine. Clean the cecum. You should be able to now see the ileocecal valve________. Urogenital System The urogenital system is a combination of the urinary system, devoted to filtration of the blood and excretion of the filtrate (the urine), and the reproductive system, which is devoted to sperm and egg production, as well as carrying embryos within the body. Since the paths of these systems often share common tracts, they are often discussed together. The paired kidneys_________ are attached to the dorsal wall of the abdominal cavity. The kidneys filter the blood, removing excess water and undesirable solutes and produce the liquid waste we know as urine. You must move aside the intestines to find them. The kidneys are retroperitoneal, that is, “behind” (outside) the peritoneum. If you tease off a little of the tissue covering the ventral surface of one kidney, you can find the renal artery_______ and renal vein_______, which carry blood to and from the kidney, and the ureter_________, the narrow, white, convoluted tube which drains the urine from each kidney. Each of these attach to the medial side of the kidney. While you are there, locate the adrenal gland______, a narrow band of tissue immediately above and medial to each kidney. Trace the ureter from the kidney to the urinary bladder,______ which is in the flap of tissue containing the umbilical cord. Just move aside structures in the way, don’t destroy them. What blood vessels run on either side of the urinary bladder? ____________________________ ___________________________________________________________________________________ Describe the pig’s urinary bladder. __________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________________ *****Find the urethra ________ which carries urine from the bladder to outside of the body. Use a sharp scalpel to cut the kidney lengthwise from the front to the back. See if you can see three different layers, cortex, medulla, and pelvis. Female Reproductive System The ovaries______________ are a pair of light-colored oval bodies located posterior to the kidneys. They are much smaller than the kidneys. This is where eggs are first made. The uterine tubes (fallopian tubes or oviducts) are very small, highly convoluted tubes lying on the dorsal surface of the ovaries. The expanded end of the fallopian tube, called the ostium , partially covers the ovary and picks up the eggs from the ovary. The fallopian tubes deliver eggs to the larger, uterine horns_________, which are the beginning of the uterus_____________. The two horns unite in the midline to form the body of the uterus which lies dorsal to the urethra. The broad ligament can be seen running laterally from the body of the uterus to the uterine horns. To dissect the rest of the female reproductive system, the pelvic cavity must be exposed. Remove the skin from the ventral pelvis and cut through the pelvic muscles and the pubic symphysis bone in the midventral line. We have bone cutters. Cut with care since the urethra lies immediately beneath the pubis. Locate the urethra, the tube carrying urine from the urinary bladder. Dorsal to the urethra, identify the vagina________, the tube leading from the posterior end of the uterus. Separate the urethra from the vagina. Toward the posterior end, the vagina and urethra unite to form a common passage called the urogenital sinus (vulva) which opens to the outside at the urogenital papilla Male Reproductive System The testes, site of sperm and substantial hormone production, are located in the same area as the ovaries throughout most of embryonic development. However, as birth approaches, they descend, and eventually reside in the scrotum. Locate a testis. If both have descended, you will have to cut open the scrotal sac to get to one. The epididymis should be located along the medial side of the testis. It begins at the cranial end of the testis and extends to its caudal end. The vas deferens carries the sperm from the epididymis to empty into the urethra. Trace the vas deferens and note how it loops over the ureter and enters the dorsal surface of the urethra. This circuitous path is the result of the descent to the scrotum. The small hole in the body wall through which the testes descended and through which the vas deferens now emerges is called the inguinal canal. The urethra is the common path for urine and sperm to the outside (via the urogenital opening). Along the way the urethra passes through the penis. The penis is an intromittant organ, that is, an extensible structure for insertion into the female’s vagina during mating. The penis lies just under the skin immediately posterior to the umbilical cord and the urogenital opening. Thoracic Cavity and Respiratory System As you deepen the cut made from the chin to the diaphragm, you will have to cut through the sternum or the ribs. Gently pull apart the body wall of the chest along the incision. You may have to crack ribs. For ease of identification of the rest of the cavity, pin down the flaps. The thoracic cavity is lined by membranes. The chest wall has the parietal pleura._________ Examine the lungs. They are tightly covered by the visceral pleura. Notice the number and position of the lobes. Look in your text or another source and compare the number of lobes the pig has to the human. Pig _______________________________________________________________________________ Human ____________________________________________________________________________ Gases are normally inhaled through the nostrils or external nares. _________ The nostrils lead to the nasal cavity, which is separated from the oral cavity by the palate. You can see the palate as the roof of the mouth. The oral and nasal cavities terminate posteriorly in the pharynx, and for a short distance air and food use the same path. To better view the structures inside the mouth, cut the mouth wider on either side. Open the mouth fully and examine: hard palate,______ soft palate,_______ teeth,______ and tongue with papillae._____ Normally when the mouth is opened, it is NOT possible to see the epiglottis______ the cartilage flap that covers the glottis_______ the opening of the trachea. Because of the cut we made it is possible to see these structures. Note the difference between the tracheal opening and the esophagus in the pharynx._____ Now go back to the neck opening. Note several delicate structures which might get damaged as we work on the larynx and trachea. The thymus___________ is the spongy mass of tissue next to the trachea, continuing all the way down to the heart. The thymus is very large in the fetus and the young but shrinks with age. Its function is to prepare T-lymphocytes, part of the immune system. The thyroid gland ____is located in this area, a small "discolored" piece of bean shaped tissue appearing to be tacked onto the trachea amongst the thymus. The thyroid is an endocrine gland important in metabolism. Clear away obstructing tissue from the larynx________ or voice box. Do NOT destroy the thyroid or all of the thymus although you might have to remove some of the thymus. Although they are quite small, you should be able to identify the thyroid cartilage,_______ the cricoid cartilage______ and the epiglottis_______ Looking down the larynx, you should be able to see whitish folds that are the vocal cords_______ . These are not well developed in the fetal pig, but would be in the adult. Why? _____________________ ____________________________________________________________________________________ Identify the trachea by its cartilage ring structure. Use the dissecting needle to feel the rings. Notice that these technically are NOT rings but “C” shapes. Feel the back of the trachea to see that the rings are not continuous. If you are very careful you will be able to follow the trachea until it branches into two bronchi which enter the lungs. *****Find the esophagus _________ which lies under (dorsal) to the trachea. The walls of the esophagus are collapsed except when a bolus of food is present. It really isn’t a “tube” but more flattened. Try to follow the esophagus down toward the stomach. Notice how it pierces the diaphragm. This is as good a time as any to examine the diaphragm________. The diaphragm, a muscle, defines the boundary between the pleural and abdominal cavities. When the diaphragm flexes(flattens and moves downward), it expands the pleural cavity. This causes a negative pressure in that space, causing air to be drawn into the lungs. Exhalation results from relaxation of the diaphragm. When breathing under duress, such as during exercise, the intercostal muscles in the body wall aide in further expanding the rib cage, allowing for increased lung volume. Examine the lungs. How many lobes on the left lung? ___________ right lung?______ Remove part of a lung and slice very thin sections. Look at the sections under a dissecting microscope. Describe what you see. __________________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________________ Lift the lungs out of the way and examine the heart_________ which is enclosed by the pericardium._____ Remove some of the thymus and tweeze away the pericardium. Examine the heart and Identify: Apex____ the point of the heart; the top of the heart is called the base_________ Use the diagram to help you find: left and right atria _________, left and right ventricles _______________, interventricular sulcus ________ the groove between the two ventricles usually filled with a coronary artery.______ a vessel that supplies blood to the heart itself. Lift the apex of the heart and find the inferior and superior vena cava _______ which enter the right atrium. The pulmonary artery________ leaves the right ventricle and divides to form the two pulmonary arteries to the lungs. Try to trace these vessels. Now find the aorta________, an arch that comes from the left ventricle. Coming off the aorta are three important vessels. The first is the brachiocephalic artery_______, which will bring blood to the arms and head. The next is left common carotid artery _______ and then the left subclavian artery__________ In fetal pigs and in fetal humans there is a vessel called the ductus arteriosus_________ that serves as a shunt between the pulmonary artery and the aorta prior to birth. In the fetus, where the lungs are not functioning in respiration, most of the blood bypasses the lungs. It passes from the right ventricle into the pulmonary artery and then through the ductus arteriosus to the aorta. At birth, the ductus arteriosus normally closes and all the blood from the right ventricle goes to the lungs. Examine the dorsal side of the heart to find the ductus arteriosus. The left common carotid artery is going to branch into the left and right carotid arteries ________, which can be seen in the neck on either side of the trachea. Near the carotid artery on either side are two jugular veins_______ the external and the internal. Dorsal to the artery and veins is the vagus nerve _______ which appears like a white cord. Move the abdominal viscera to the right so you can see the abdominal aorta _____ and the inferior vena cava (caudal vena cava) _________. Notice the relationship between the abdominal aorta and the renal artery and the inferior vena cava and the renal vein. If time permits you may dissect some of the pig’s head. Find the parotid salivary gland. To do this, use the scalpel to make an incision through the skin and facial muscles beginning at the base of the ear. Cut carefully as it is easy to cut into the parotid gland. The brain and Spinal cord. Using the scalpel, make an incision through the skin of the head as in the diagram below. Peel off the skin and look for sutures in the skull. Using scissors and forceps carefully pull or break off parts of the skull until you have exposed the dura mater_____ covering the brain. The brain and spinal cord are protected by three membranes, the meninges. The dura mater is the thickest and toughest. Cut through the dura mater to expose the pia mater, the meninge attached directly to the brain. Identify the right and left cerebral hemispheres. Notice the longitudinal fissure. Find the cerebellum. Under the cerebellum you may be able to identify the medulla. You might have to remove some of the brain to see structures beneath the cerebrum. The pig has 12 pairs of cranial nerves just like humans. These nerves mainly serve the sense organs of the head. See if you can find them. The spinal cord is surrounded by the vertebrae of the spinal column. To expose the spinal cord, remove the skin from an area of the back about 8 cm long and 2-3 cm wide. Use scissors to cut through the vertebrae. You should be able to see the spinal cord with the branching spinal nerves.