Ovariectomized mice were prepared for decidualization with oestrogen and progesterone and arachis oil injected into the uterine lumen. Hormone injections were then stopped and uteri examined at intervals between 31 and 84 h after the last progesterone injection. At 31 and 35 h the stroma showed a normal decidual reaction. Between 45 and 79 h the stroma underwent a series of changes which started with the congestion of dilated blood vessels with swollen erythrocytes followed by breakdown of the vessel walls and extravasation of blood. At the same time the decidual cells showed typical apoptotic changes and there was invasion by leucocytes. An outer ring of stroma did not take part in the degenerative process and eventually a central core of blood cells and degenerating decidual cells became detached and was shed into the lumen.
Animals treated in exactly the same way but with the omission of the decidual stimulus did not show such changes in the stroma. It is suggested that the changes in the endometrium resemble those of menstruation and support the suggestion that for menstruation to occur the stroma must be differentiated for implantation. This occurs during the cycle in women but does not occur in non-primates unless a decidual stimulus is applied to the uterus.
J. Endocr. (1984) 100, 295–300
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