A
Capsule (from the Latin
capsula, a small box), is a term in
botany for a dry seed vessel, as in the
poppy,
iris,
foxglove[?], etc., containing one or more cells. When ripe the capsule opens and scatters the seed. The word is used also for a small gelatinous case enclosing a dose of
medicine, and for a metal cap or cover on
bottles and
jars[?]. Capsules on
wine bottles were historically made of lead, and protected the
cork from being gnawed away by
rodents or infested with
cork weevil[?]. Because of research showing that trace amounts of lead could remain on the lip of the bottle, lead capsules were slowly phased out, and by the 1990s, most capsules were made of aluminum foil or plastic.
In anatomy the term is used to denote a cover or envelope partly or wholly surrounding a structure. Every diarthrodial joint possesses a fibrous or ligamentous capsule, lined with synovial membrane, attached to the adjacent ends of the articulating bones. The term is particularly applied to the sac which encloses the crystalline lens of the eye; to Glisson[?]'s capsule, a thin areolar coat of fibrous tissue lying inside the tunica serosa of the liver; to the glomerular capsules in the kidney substance; to the suprarenal capsules, two small flattened organs in the epigastric region; and to the internal and external capsules of the brain.
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