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Life is always intimately bound up with structure and with the
continuous transformation which structures undergo. Modern science
and technology have now made it possible to display these
structures before our eyes, right up to the frontiers of molecular
dimensions. When several years ago Dr. HANS LUDWIG, while working
at the First Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology of the
University at Munich, demonstrated to us some micrographs showing
the human oviduct's surface pattern, my immediate reaction was:
This is the environment that encom passes the very onset of an
individual human life. In fact, scanning electron microscopy,
superimposed upon classical micro morphology, has enabled us to get
insight into the landscape of living structures, their intricate
organization and their delicate beauty as well. At the same time
this technique opens up an entirely new perspective in our
three-dimensional view and comprehension of biological events. This
becomes especially evident in the realm of reproductive processes
within the human female reproductive tract. In this volume the
authors give - for the first time systematically - a description of
the surface patterns of the inside of the human vagina, ecto and
endocervix, and the human uterus and oviduct; they depict ovulatory
alterations of the ovarian surface and surface changes under
various endo crine conditions, as well as in relation to the
menstrual cycle, pregnancy, fetal growth, and the menopausal
cessation of ovarian functional activity. of the placental
intervillum, the In addition they describe surface structures basal
plate and the amnion."
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