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  • Electronic Resource  (3)
  • 74.30.C  (1)
  • Cold Receptor  (1)
  • Dura mater encephali  (1)
  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Anatomy and embryology 175 (1987), S. 289-301 
    ISSN: 1432-0568
    Keywords: Dura mater encephali ; Sensory receptors ; Nerve fibres ; Vascular bed ; Lymphatic vessel ; Nociception ; Headache
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The dura mater encephali of the rat is richly supplied by myelinated (A-axons) and unmyelinated (C-axons) nerve fibres. For the supratentorial part the main nerve supply stems from all three branches of the trigeminal nerve. Finally, 250 myelinated and 800 unmyelinated nerve fibres innervate one side of the supratentorial part. The vascular bed of the dura mater exhibits long postcapillary venules up to 200 μm in length with segments of endothelial fenestration. Lymphatic vessels occur within the dura mater. They leave the cranial cavity through the openings of the cribriform plate, rostral to the bulla tympani together with the transverse sinus, and the middle meningeal artery. The perineural sheath builds up a tube-like net containing the A- and C-axons. It is spacious in the parietal dura mater and dense at the sagittal sinus along its extension from rostral to caudal and at the confluence of sinuses. Terminals of both the A- and C-axons are of the unencapsulated type. Unencapsulated Ruffini-like receptors stemming from A-axons are found in the dural connective tissue at sites where superficial cerebral veins enter the sagittal sinus and at the confluence of sinuses. The terminations of single A-axons together with C-fibre bundles mix up in their final course in one Schwann cell to build up multiaxonal units or terminations (up to 15 axonal profiles). A morphological differentiation is made due to the topography of these terminations; firstly, in different segments of the vascular bed: postcapillary venule, venule, the sinus wall, lymphatic vessel wall, and secondly, within the dura mater: inner periosteal layer, collagenous fibre bundles of the meningeal layer and at the mesothelial cell layer of the subdural space.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Pflügers Archiv 352 (1974), S. 1-10 
    ISSN: 1432-2013
    Keywords: Thermoreceptors ; Cold Receptor ; Ultrastructure ; Receptor Morphology
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Afferent impulses were recorded from single fibers serving cold and warm receptors in the skin of the cat's nose. The receptors were carefully tested for specificity and the receptive fields localized under the microscope with a microthermode. Each single fiber served one spot-like receptive field. The field was marked without damaging the nerve ending by inserting two thin stainless steel wires into the skin on both sides of the receptor. Investigation of semithin and ultrathin serial sections by light and electron microscopy revealed beneath each cold spot a dermal papilla which contained a single small myelinated fiber dividing into a number of unmyelinated terminals. Near the epidermis the receptor branches leave their Schwann cell envelope, penetrate the basal lamina of the epithelium, and their tips are invaginated into the cytoplasm of the basal epithelial cells. The basal lamina of the epithelium fuses with that of the receptor axon. The receptor axons contain numerous mitochondria, glycogen particles and a filamentous receptor matrix with vesicles of various sizes. The described structures were absent beneath the warm spots. In addition to the cold receptors, Merkel cell neurite complexes and lamellated encapsulated endings were found that are known to be mechanoreceptors.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    The European physical journal 97 (1995), S. 55-58 
    ISSN: 1434-6036
    Keywords: 74.70.T ; 65.40.E ; 74.30.C
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Physics
    Notes: Abstract We have measured the specific heat capacity of a single crystal of UPt3 in zero magnetic field, in 2 T, and in 4 T (above $$B_{C_2 } $$ )with the adiabatic warm-up method down to a final temperature of 15 mK. The results prove our previous assumption that the normal state of UPt3 exhibits a similar, slightly modified specific heat anomaly around 20 mK as is present in the superconducting state. It is most probably a signature of long range magnetic order. Entropy balance aboveT C is fulfilled if both low-temperature peaks are included. For UBe13 (in the superconducting state) we find no specific heat anomaly down to 24 mK but a deviation from the power law valid at higher temperatures. DC-magnetization measurements on a second single crystal of UPt3 in a SQUID system yield a temperature dependence ∼T 2 between 150 and 20 mK extending the temperature range of earlier measurements by a factor of 4.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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