The blind pouch at the beginning of the large intestine is called the cecum, and it has the vermiform appendix attached underneath.
diverticulitis
Diverticulectomy is the medical term meaning surgical removal of a diverticulum, a blind pouch that may be found in the colon.
The Blind Pouch is a part of the vagina just before the cervix where the vagina forms a kind of "bag," if you will, where the bull's semen collects. It is also called the Fornix Vagina. The Bind Pouch is a pain to get through for newbie AI techs since it can fool you into thinking you're in the uterus when you're not.
They are very small, with no hair, blind, and they crawl their way into moms pouch where they develop.
This is another word for the Pouch of Douglas, which is a blind ending pouch in the inside of the abdominal cavity. It is situated between the back of the uterus (womb) of a woman and the rectum.
The cecum is called a blind pouch because this is exactly what it is - an extension off the large intestine near the junction of the large and small intestines that has one opening at one end. The other end is closed, forming a long tube similar to a sock.
The blind, furless, miniature newborn, the size of a jelly bean, crawls across its mother's fur to make its way into the pouch, where it latches onto a teat for food.
Yes and no. The numbat is one of Australia's few marsupials that does not have a closed pouch, but just an open pouch. Like the young of other marsupials, numbat young attach to the mother's teat, which swell in their mouth to prevent them being dislodged, but the young, which are born blind and hairless, have to cling to the belly fur of their mother while they grow.
No. Joeys are born blind, hairless and completely defenceless, being about the size of a bean. Most of their development is done in the pouch.
A koala doesn't have a litter. They are a marsupial and have one baby at a time. The baby grows in a pouch attached to the mother until it is big enough to enter the world. It begins blind and hairless and grows in the pouch.
Yes. Like all marsupials, koala joeys are tiny, hairless, blind and completely helpless, unable to survive outside of the mother's pouch.