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  • Cerebellum  (1)
  • Crossopterygii  (1)
  • Diagnostic method  (1)
  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Anatomy and embryology 144 (1974), S. 315-336 
    ISSN: 1432-0568
    Keywords: Cerebellum ; Mormyrid fishes
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The corpus cerebelli of mormyrid fishes is strongly developed and differentiated into four lobes: C1−C4. Although all of these lobes contain the characteristic cerebellar layers: granular, ganglionic and molecular, they show distinct architectonic differences. A previous study revealed that the ganglionic layer of C1, in addition to Purkinje elements contains conspicuous giant cells. In the present paper the results of a further analysis of C1 are reported. This analysis is based on serially sectioned brains of Gnathonemus petersii, stained according to Nissl, Bodian and Häggquist. Semi-thin sections were stained with p-phenylenediamine. Routine EM techniques were used to visualize synaptic relations. Mossy fibres and granule, Golgi, Purkinje and stellate cells are located characteristically throughout C1. It appeared that the giant cells of a previous study represent the largest elements of a population which has been termed now the eurydendroid cells. The average size of the latter is somewhat larger than that of the Purkinje cells, but both groups of cells show a considerable overlap in the size of their somata. Purkinje cells and eurydendroid cells are present throughout the ganglionic layer and both have a flattened, sagittally oriented, dendritic tree that extends into the molecular layer. Yet, the eurydendroid cells (EC) display the following characteristics which distinguish them from Purkinje cells (PC): (1) In EC the Nissl substance is dispersed diffusely throughout the soma, whereas in PC it tends to be concentrated around the nucleus, (2) The soma/nucleus ratio for EC is distinctly larger than for PC, (3) The dendritic trees of EC extend over a larger stretch of the molecular layer than those of PC, hence the term EC, (4) The dendrites of EC are more widely spaced and oriented less strictly parallel to each other than those of PC, (5) The dendrites of EC are somewhat irregular in outline and not covered with spines, in contrast to those of PC, (6) The axons of EC are oriented radially and join bundles of coarse fibres which leave the cerebellum whereas the axons of PC extend and ramify within the ganglionic layer, (7) The somata of EC, contrary to those of PC, are enveloped by a dense axonal plexus which forms numerous synaptic terminals on them. The numerical ratio of EC: PC was 1:5.5. The circuitry in C1 and the possible functional roles of its constituent neurons are discussed. It is pointed out that in this lobe the axons of PC impinge on EC and that the latter constitute its output system.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Anatomy and embryology 151 (1977), S. 157-169 
    ISSN: 1432-0568
    Keywords: Central nervous system ; Crossopterygii
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The macroscopic anatomy of the brain of the single surviving crossopterygian species Latimeria chalumnae is described and depicted. The brain of this fish is slender and elongated. The rhombencephalon is well developed; its ventricular aspect shows four longitudinally arranged ridges which roughly correspond to the functional zones of Herrick and Johnston. The cerebellum comprises two extremely large auriculae and an unpaired, evaginated corpus cerebelli. The mesencephalon is small and does not show any marked differentiation of its surface. In the diencephalon, ventricular sulci mark the boundaries between the epithalamus, dorsal thalamus, ventral thalamus and hypothalamus. The dorsal thalamus protrudes into the ventricular cavity. The telencephalon can be clearly divided into a dorsal pallium and a ventral subpallium. The pallium is represented by a thickened, solid body. It is partly covered by a membranous roof, which in the median plane constitutes an ependymal septum. The subpallium is thin-walled and clearly evaginated. This structure and the ventral part of the pallium enclose a distinct lateral ventricle. The olfactory bulbs are connected with the telencephalon proper by extremely long olfactory peduncles. Interestingly, the brain of Latimeria appears to have gross structural features in common with all major groups of fish, i.e. the Chondrichthyes or cartilaginous fishes, the Dipnoi or lung fishes and the Actinopterygii or ray-finned fishes. Thus, with respect to the shape of the rhombencephalon and of the vestibulolateral lobe of the cerebellum, Latimeria approaches the chondrichthyan condition; the mesencephalon, the diencephalon and the subpallial parts of the telencephalon share a number of features with their dipnoan homologues, whereas the corpus cerebelli, the pallium and the membranous parts of the telencephalon clearly resemble the corresponding structures in the actinopterygians. No special structural affinities to the amphibians were noticed.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Medical & biological engineering & computing 27 (1989), S. 502-506 
    ISSN: 1741-0444
    Keywords: Decubitus ulcers ; Diagnostic method ; Gerontology ; Pressure sores ; Prevention ; Susceptibility
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract A method for measuring the susceptibility of a patient to develop decubitus ulcers is described and initially evaluated. It is based on an indirect, noninvasive measurement of the transient regional blood flow response after a test pressure load which simulates the external stimulus for pressure-sore formation. This method was developed to determine the individual risk of a patient and to study the subfactors which contribute to the susceptibility. This would also offer the possibility of evaluating the effect of preventive treatment aimed at reducing the susceptibility. The method was found to discriminate between preselected elderly patients at risk on the one hand, and non-risk patients and healthy young adults on the other hand. No differences in blood flow responses were found between the non-risk elderly patients and the healthy young adults. This suggests that age per se is not a factor in the formation of pressure sores. In the risk group the recovery time after pressure relief was found to be three times as long as the duration of the pressure exercise. This indicates that the recovery time after pressure exercise may be as important as the period of pressure exercise in deducing the risk of developing decubitus ulcers.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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