body
(bod′ē)
1. A complete organism, living or dead; the sum of its physical components.
SYN: SEE: soma (1)
2. The trunk (1).
3. The principal mass of any structure.
4. A distinct mass.
5. The largest or most important part of any organ.
SEE: limbic system for illus
acetone body
SEE: Ketone body.
amygdaloid body
SEE: Amygdala (2).
anococcygeal body
The muscle and fibrous tissue lying between the coccyx and the anus.
aortic body
A chemoreceptor in the wall of the aortic arch that detects changes in blood gases, esp. oxygen, and pH. It is innervated by the vagus nerve and stimulates reflex changes in heart rate, respiration, and blood pressure that restore normal blood oxygen levels.
asbestos body
A beaded, dumbbell-shaped body formed when a macrophage engulfs asbestos fibers.
Barr body
SEE: Barr body
basal body
A small intercellular granule to which proteins that form cilia or flagella attach.
SYN: SEE: basal granule; SEE: blepharoplast
carotid body
Any of the chemoreceptors at the bifurcation of each common carotid artery, which detect changes in blood gases (esp. oxygen) and pH. They stimulate reflex changes in heart rate, respiration, and blood pressure that restore normal blood oxygen levels. They are innervated by the glossopharyngeal nerves.
SYN: SEE: carotid gland; SEE: glomus caroticum
chromaffin body
Any of the bodies composed principally of chromaffin cells, arranged serially along both sides of the dorsal aorta and in the kidney, liver, and gonads. They are ectodermal in origin, having the same origin as cells of the sympathetic ganglia.
SYN: SEE: paraganglion
ciliary body
A body directly behind the iris of the eye. It secretes the aqueous humor and contains the ciliary muscle that changes the shape, and thus the refractive power, of the lens by tightening and relaxing the tension on the lens zonule.
SYN: SEE: ciliary apparatus
SEE: eye for illus
coccygeal body
An arteriovenous anastomosis at the tip of the coccyx formed by the middle sacral artery.
SYN: SEE: glomus coccygeum
denticulate body
The corpus dentatum of the cerebellum.
Donovan body
SEE: Donovan body
foreign body
SEE: foreign body
fruiting body
The reproductive cap of a fungus. It contains the fungal spores.
Highmore body
SEE: Highmore, Nathaniel
hyaline body
A homogeneous body resulting from colloid degeneration and found in degenerate cells.
SEE: hyaline degeneration
inclusion body
Any of the microscopic structures made of a dense, occasionally infective core surrounded by an envelope, seen in the cytoplasm and nuclei of cells infected with some intracellular pathogens. These bodies are seen in cells infected with herpesviruses (esp. cytomegalovirus), smallpox, lymphogranuloma venereum, psittacosis, and other organisms.
SYN: SEE: cell inclusion;
SEE: Negri bodies
ketone body
Any of the substances that increase in the blood as a result of faulty carbohydrate metabolism. Among them are beta-hydroxybutyric acid, acetoacetic acid, and acetone. They increase in people with untreated or inadequately controlled diabetes mellitus and are the primary cause of acidosis. They may also occur in other metabolic disturbances.
SYN: SEE: acetone body
lateral geniculate body
One of two masses of gray matter forming elevations on the lateral portion of the posterior aspect of the thalamus. Each is the termination of afferent fibers from the retina, which it receives through the optic nerves and tracts.
SEE: medial geniculate body
Lewy body
SEE: Lewy body.
lipid body
SEE: Lipid droplet.
loose body
A fragment of bone or cartilage within the joint of a patient with severe degenerative or neuropathic arthritis.
Luys body
SEE: Luys body
Mallory body
SEE: Mallory body
malpighian body
A splenic lymph nodule or renal cell.
mammillary body
A spherical body of hypothalamic nuclei that bulges out of the base of the brain behind the pituitary gland on either side of the midline. It is an integral component of the limbic circuitry, receiving signals from the hippocampus via the fornix and sending signals to the anterior thalamus via the mammillothalamic tract.
SEE: medial mammillary nucleus; SEE: limbic system for illus
medial geniculate body
One of two masses of gray matter forming elevations on the lateral portion of the posterior aspect of the thalamus. Each is the termination of afferent fibers from the retina, which it receives through the optic nerves and tracts.
SEE: lateral geniculate body
Nissl body
SEE: Nissl, Franz
olivary body
SEE: Oliva.
pacchionian body
Papp-Lantos bodies
SEE: Papp-Lantos bodies
parolivary bodies
Nuclei in the medulla oblongata, lying close to the olivary bodies.
perineal body
A body of tissue that separates the anus from the vestibule and the lower part of the vagina.
pineal body
SEE: pineal gland
pituitary body
SEE: Pituitary gland
polar body
A small nonfunctional cell produced in oogenesis resulting from the divisions of the primary and secondary oocytes.
postbranchial body
psammoma body
A laminated calcified body seen in certain types of tumors and sometimes associated with chronic inflammation.
restiform body
One of the inferior cerebellar peduncles of the brain, found along the lateral border of the fourth ventricle. These two bands of fibers, principally ascending, connect the medulla oblongata with the cerebellum.
Ross body
SEE: Ross body
Russell body
SEE: Russell body
striate body
striated bodySEE: Corpus striatum.
trapezoid body
A transverse sheet of secondary sensory axons that originate in the cochlear nuclei and that cross the midline just dorsal to the pons in the rostral hindbrain. About half of the cochlear axons remain ipsilateral and ascend toward the inferior colliculus via the lateral lemniscus. Those cochlear axons that cross the midline in the trapezoid body also join the (contralateral) lateral lemniscus and run toward the inferior colliculus.
ultimobranchial body
One of two embryonic pharyngeal pouches usually considered as rudimentary fifth pouches. They become separated from the pharynx and incorporated into the thyroid gland, where they give rise to parafollicular cells that secrete calcitonin, a hormone that lowers the blood calcium level.
SYN: SEE: postbranchial body
vertebral body
A short column of bone forming the weight-supporting portion of a vertebra. The roots of a vertebral arch project from the dorsolateral surfaces of this body.
vitreous body
SEE: Vitreous (2).
wolffian body
SEE: Mesonephros.
yellow body
SEE: Corpus luteum.