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1.
To elucidate compositional changes of peripheral nerves with aging, the authors investigated age-related changes of elements and their relationships in the optic, trigeminal, vagus, median, radial, ulnar, femoral, sciatic, tibial, and common peroneal nerves by inductively coupled plasma-atomic emission spectrometry. The subjects consisted of 10 men and 12 women, ranging in age from 65 to 91 yr. It was found that although accumulations of Ca and P occurred only in the trigeminal nerve at old age, it hardly occurred in the optic, vagus, median, radial, ulnar, femoral, sciatic, tibial, and common peroneal nerves at old age. The average contents of Ca and P were three and two times higher in the trigeminal nerve than in the other nine kinds of nerve, respectively. Likewise, the average content of Mg was a little higher in the trigeminal nerve compared with the other nerves. With regard to the relationships among elements, significant direct correlations were found among the contents of Ca, P, S, and Mg in most, but not all, 10 kinds of nerve. In the trigeminal nerve, a significant inverse correlation was found between the contents of S and the other elements, such as Ca, P, and Mg. Regarding the relationships between the contents of S and other elements, the nerves, except for the trigeminal nerve, differed from those found in the arteries previously reported.  相似文献   

2.
The afferent and efferent components of the facial nerve were traced within the brain stem of Rana catesbeiana, using three different neuroanatomical techniques. Primary afferent fibers could be traced to the spinal tract of trigeminal nerve and to fasciculus solitarius as far caudally as the first or second spinal segment, using silver degeneration methods. Cobalt filling of of the entire nerve showed the same distribution of afferent fibers, as well as the filling of the cells within the mesencephalic nucleus of trigeminal, indicating the origin of a proprioceptive component of the facial nerve. Cobalt iontophoresis and horseradish perioxidase experiments showed that the motor nucleus of the facial nerve was located just ventral to the fourth ventricle, and caudal to the motor nucleus of trigeminal. The distribution of afferent fibers to fasciculus solitarius and the spinal tract of trigeminal is similar in some respects to the distribution of afferent fibers from the trigeminal and vagal nerves in the bullfrog. The afferent fibers from the three cranial nerves are found as far caudally in the brain stem as the second spinal segment.  相似文献   

3.
Summary The overall distribution of substance P (SP) immunoreactive (IR) nerves surrounding the cerebral arteries of the bent-winged bat were investigated immunohistochemically. In this microchiropteran species, the walls from the vertebral artery to the caudal part of the basilar artery have considerably well-developed plexuses of SP-IR nerves, whereas no demonstrable SP-IR fibers were found in the crostral part of the basilar artery, and in more rostrally located arteries the nerve supply was very sparse or occasionally lacking. This innervation pattern has not yet been established for the cerebral arterial systems of other mammals that have been studied under normal conditions, but it is very similar to the pattern of SP-IR innervation observed in the guinea pig and cat of which the trigeminal ganglia have been destroyed. From the combination of this and other immunohistochemical findings, it is suggested that SP-IR nerves innervating the vertebral and basilar arteries of the bent-winged bat originate from the upper cervical dorsal root ganglia (DRG) and enter the cranial cavity along the vertebral artery and through the meninges.Abbreviations BA basilar artery - CSN cervical spinal nerves - ICS internal carotid system - SCG superior cervical ganglion - SNB sympathetic nerve bundle - VA vertebral artery - VBS vertebro-basilar system  相似文献   

4.
Sensory nerves play a vital role in maintaining corneal transparency. They originate in the trigeminal ganglion, which is derived from two embryonic cell populations (cranial neural crest and ectodermal placode). Nonetheless, it is unclear whether corneal nerves arise from neural crest, from placode, or from both. Quail-chick chimeras and species-specific antibodies allowed tracing quail-derived neural crest or placode cells during trigeminal ganglion and corneal development, and after ablation of either neural crest or placode. Neural crest chimeras showed quail nuclei in the proximal part of the trigeminal ganglion, and quail nerves in the pericorneal nerve ring and in the cornea. In sharp contrast, placode chimeras showed quail nuclei in the distal part of the trigeminal ganglion, but no quail nerves in the cornea or in the pericorneal nerve ring. Quail placode-derived nerves were present, however, in the eyelids. Neural crest ablation between stages 8 and 9 resulted in diminished trigeminal ganglia and absence of corneal innervation. Ablation of placode after stage 11 resulted in loss of the ophthalmic branch of the trigeminal ganglion and reduced corneal innervation. Noninnervated corneas still became transparent. These results indicate for the first time that although both neural crest and placode contribute to the trigeminal ganglion, corneal innervation is entirely neural crest-derived. Nonetheless, proper corneal innervation requires presence of both cell types in the embryonic trigeminal ganglion. Also, complete lack of innervation has no discernible effect on development of corneal transparency or cell densities.  相似文献   

5.
The overall distribution of substance P (SP) immunoreactive (IR) nerves surrounding the cerebral arteries of the bent-winged bat were investigated immunohistochemically. In this microchiropteran species, the walls from the vertebral artery to the caudal part of the basilar artery have considerably well-developed plexuses of SP-IR nerves, whereas no demonstrable SP-IR fibers were found in the rostral part of the basilar artery, and in more rostrally located arteries the nerve supply was very sparse or occasionally lacking. This innervation pattern has not yet been established for the cerebral arterial systems of other mammals that have been studied under normal conditions, but it is very similar to the pattern of SP-IR innervation observed in the guinea pig and cat of which the trigeminal ganglia have been destroyed. From the combination of this and other immunohistochemical findings, it is suggested that SP-IR nerves innervating the vertebral and basilar arteries of the bent-winged bat originate from the upper cervical dorsal root ganglia (DRG) and enter the cranial cavity along the vertebral artery and through the meninges.  相似文献   

6.
The investigation of film preparations and histological sections of human trigeminal nerves impregnated with silver nitrate and treated after Gomori, Falck--Hillarp demonstrated a rich innervation in the intraneural blood vessels. The most various and complex interconnections of the neural structures were noted in arterioles and venules of the node capsule, epineurium and external layers of perineurium of the trigeminal nerve branches. On the vessel walls of these layers, neural plexus were revealed. Sensitive innervation of the neural blood vessels mainly performed by posvalent tissue-vascular receptors. In the walls of intraneural vessels, adrenergic and cholinergic neural plexus are revealed.  相似文献   

7.
The cornea, the most densely innervated tissue on the surface of the body, becomes innervated in a series of highly coordinated developmental events. During cornea development, chick trigeminal nerve growth cones reach the cornea margin at embryonic day (E)5, where they are initially repelled for days from E5 to E8, instead encircling the corneal periphery in a nerve ring prior to entering on E9. The molecular events coordinating growth cone guidance during cornea development are poorly understood. Here we evaluated a potential role for the Robo-Slit nerve guidance family. We found that Slits 1, 2 and 3 expression in the cornea and lens persisted during all stages of cornea innervation examined. Robo1 expression was developmentally regulated in trigeminal cell bodies, expressed robustly during nerve ring formation (E5-8), then later declining concurrent with projection of growth cones into the cornea. In this study we provide in vivo and in vitro evidence that Robo-Slit signaling guides trigeminal nerves during cornea innervation. Transient, localized inhibition of Robo-Slit signaling, by means of beads loaded with inhibitory Robo-Fc protein implanted into the developing eyefield in vivo, led to disorganized nerve ring formation and premature cornea innervation. Additionally, when trigeminal explants (source of neurons) were oriented adjacent to lens vesicles or corneas (source of repellant molecules) in organotypic tissue culture both lens and cornea tissues strongly repelled E7 trigeminal neurites, except in the presence of inhibitory Robo-Fc protein. In contrast, E10 trigeminal neurites were not as strongly repelled by cornea, and presence of Robo-Slit inhibitory protein had no effect. In full, these findings suggest that nerve repulsion from the lens and cornea during nerve ring formation is mediated by Robo-Slit signaling. Later, a shift in nerve guidance behavior occurs, in part due to molecular changes in trigeminal neurons, including Robo1 downregulation, thus allowing nerves to find the Slit-expressing cornea permissive for growth cones.  相似文献   

8.
Summary The extrinsic innervation of the guinea pig uterus was studied by immunohistochemical, ultrastructural and enzyme histochemical methods.The extrinsic innervation was organized in two major ways. One consisted of nerve trunks and non-varicose nerve fibres running in the suspensory ligament, and the other of a plexus of varicose nerve fibres surrounding vessels, and non-vessel-related non-varicose nerve fibres in the mesouterus. The use of different neuronal and Schwann cell markers showed that the extrinsic innervation was predominantly adrenergic and contained only few peptidergic nerves. Acetylcholinesterase-positive (cholinergic) nerves were only found around the uterine artery.In late pregnancy, the extrinsic nerves of the mesouterus adjacent to foetus-containing uterine horns underwent pronounced degenerative changes comprising both Schwann cell and axonal structures. In comparison, no changes were found in extrinsic nerves of mesouteri adjacent to non-foetus-bearing uterine horns or in extrinsic nerves in the suspensory ligaments. Further, chemical sympathectomy produced axonal degeneration but no changes in the Schwann cells.In conclusion, the pregnancy-induced nerve degeneration is of a very special type different from that following chemical sympathectomy and represents a local phenomenon related to the conceptus. Hypothetically, this could be of importance for counteracting disturbances in placental blood flow.  相似文献   

9.
In order to establish that the pineal gland is innervated by pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP)-immunoreactive nerve fibers originating in the trigeminal ganglion, ophthalmic and maxillary nerves were transected by using a subtemporal fossa approach. The number of PACAP-immunoreactive nerve fibers in the pineal gland of rats with a total transection of the nerve was compared with that of rats without surgery. In the operated rat, PACAP-immunoreactive nerve fibers in the superficial pineal decreased remarkably, indicating that the trigeminal ganglion was the origin of these nerve fibers. This research provides evidence supporting the hypothesis that PACAP-immunoreactive nerves regulate the synthesis and/or secretion of melatonin in the pineal gland.  相似文献   

10.
The possible basal differences in lipid class and fatty acid composition between a cranial nerve (the trigeminal nerve) and two spinal nerves (the ulnar and sciatic nerves) as well as the effects of dietary lipids on the same nerves were studied. A basal (BD) and four experimental diets containing respectively hydrogenated coconut oil (HCO), grapestone oil (GSO), olive oil (OO) and linseed oil (LSO) were used. Trigeminal lipids fatty acid composition differs significantly from sciatic and ulnar ones in the percentages of 16:0, 16:1, 18:0, 18:2 n-6, 20:0, 20:1, 20:4 n-6, 24:0, 24:1 and 22:6 n-3. Also the proportions of triacylglycerols and free cholesterol strongly differ in trigeminal and spinal nerves whereas no significant difference was detected between ulnar and sciatic nerve lipids. Following the administration of the four experimental diets for 60 days, no significant change was observed in the fatty acid pattern of trigeminal lipids while the spinal ones showed a significant increase in the proportions of the fatty acids present in large quantities in the dietary oils used (i.e.: oleic acid in the OO samples). These changes are probably linked with the rapid metabolic turnover of triacylglycerols, present in larger amounts in spinal nerve lipids.  相似文献   

11.
Infrared spectra were obtained from the sciatic and optic nerves of the frog (Rana sp.) and the trigeminal and olfactory nerves of the garfish (Lepisosteus osseus). The myelinated nerves showed dichroism at several absorption peaks, particularly 1,220-1,230 cm-1, but the nonmyelinated nerves showed little or no dichroism. The dichroic peaks indicate that in myelinated nerve, there is an ordered arrangement of protein and lipid molecules which was not found in nonmyelinated nerve.  相似文献   

12.
Summary The intramuscular nerves and myoneural junctions in the rat rectus superior, medialis and inferior muscles from 10 hours to about 10 days after section of the trigeminal and oculomotor nerves were studied with the electron microscope. Two different kinds of myoneural junctions are to be observed; one type derives from myelinated nerves and is similar to the ordinary myoneural junctions (motor end plates) of other striated skeletal muscles, while the other type derives from unmyelinated nerves, is smaller in size and has many myoneural synapses distributed along a single extrafusal muscle fibre.Section of the trigeminal nerve caused no changes in the myoneural synapses. After section of the oculomotor nerve degenerative changes occur in both the myelinated and unmyelinated nerves and in both types of myoneural junctions. In the axon terminals of both the myelinated and unmyelinated nerves the earliest changes are to be observed 10 to 15 hours after section of the nerve. First, swelling of the axoplasm, fragmentation of microtubules and microfilaments and swelling of mitochondria takes place, somewhat later agglutination of the axonal vesicles and mitochondria. The axon terminals are separated from the postsynaptic muscle membrane by hypertrophied teloglial cells about 24 hours after section of the nerve. The debris of the axon terminals is usually digested by the teloglial cells within 42 to 48 hours in both types of myoneural junction.Changes in the postsynaptic membrane are observed in the myoneural junctions of the unmyelinated nerves as disappearance of the already earlier irregular infoldings, whereas no changes take place in the infoldings of the motor end plates. The postsynaptic sarcoplasm and its ribosomal content increase somewhat.The earliest changes occur along unmyelinated axons 10 to 15 hours and along myelinated axons 15 to 24 hours after nerve section. The unmyelinated axons are usually totally digested within 48 hours, whereas the myelinated axons took between 48 hours and 4 days to disappear. The degeneration, fragmentation and digestion of the myelin sheath begin between 24 and 42 hours and still continues 10 days after the operation.The results demonstrate that in the three muscles studied structures underlying the physiologically well known double innervation of the extraoccular muscles are all part of the oculomotor system.We are grateful to Professor Antti Telkkä, M. D. Head of the Electron Microscope Laboratory, University of Helsinki, for permission to use the facilities of the laboratory.  相似文献   

13.
Peripheral nerve and vascular patterns are congruent in the adult vertebrate, but this has been disputed in vertebrate embryos. The most detailed of these studies have used the avian forelimb as a model system, yet neurovascular anatomical relationships and critical vascular remodeling events remain inadequately characterized in this model. To address this, we have used a combination of intravascular marker injection, multilabel fluorescent stereomicroscopy, and confocal microscopy to analyze the spatiotemporal relationships between peripheral nerves and blood vessels in the forelimb of 818 quail embryos from E2 (HH13) to E15 (HH41). We find that the neurovascular anatomical relationships established during development are highly stereotypic and congruent. Blood vessels typically arise before their corresponding nerves, but there are several critical exceptions to this rule. The vascular pattern is extensively remodeled from the earliest stage examined (E2; HH13), whereas the peripheral nerves, the first of which enter the forelimb at E3.5-E4 (HH21-HH24), have a progressively unfolding pattern that, once formed, remains essentially unchanged. The adult neurovascular pattern is not established until E8 (HH34). Peripheral nerves are always found to track close and parallel to the vasculature. As they track distally, peripheral nerves always lie on the side of the vasculature away from the center of the forelimb. Neurovascular patterns have a hierarchy of congruence that is highest in the dorsoventral plane, followed by the anteroposterior, and lastly the proximodistal planes.  相似文献   

14.
Eighty five patients suffering from trigeminal neuralgia resistant to medical therapy underwent surgical treatment for relief of pain at the Department of Neurosurgery University Alexander Hospital Sofia from 1981 until 1997. Microvascular decompression at the root entry zone of the V(th) nerve has been performed using the technique of Jannetta. The operative exploration of the parapontine root entry zone disclosed neurovascular conflicts in 87.1% of the cases. They represented displacement and/or distortion, sometimes pressure grooves, discoloration, altered vascularity of the V(th) nerve. The analysis of early postoperative results have shown an excellent outcome in 90.6% of the cases, good in 3.5% and poor in 2.4% with mortality of 3.5% early in these series when no postoperative monitoring was available. The follow up study one year after surgery revealed 90.2% excellent and 3.7% good results and poor outcome and recurrences in 6.1% of the cases. Patients with long lasting trigeminal neuralgia, previous destructive procedures, venous compression, lack of convincible evidences for neurovascular conflicts had less favorable outcome or recurrences. In the last years partial sensory rhizotomy was performed in cases when no neurovascular conflicts were found out. Patients with unquestionable arterial compression leading to displacement associated with distortion and pressure grooves had excellent outcomes. Early recurrences were associated with missed pathology at the entry zones. During reexplorations for late recurrences new arterial compression was found in less than half of the cases.  相似文献   

15.
Summary Cholinesterase (ChE) activities of the rat cornea were demonstrated histochemically by using both light and electron microscopes. Acetylcholinesterase (AChE) reaction was localized in the axolemma of the nerves in the corneal stroma. The epithelial cell membranes and the intraepithelial nerve endings also showed AChE reaction.Non-specific cholinesterase (NsChE) activity was observed only in the endothelial cell membranes.Cervical sympathectomy, ciliary ganglionectomy and stereotactic coagulation of the ophthalmic division of the trigeminal nerve were performed in order to study the routes of the AChE-containing nerves to the cornea. The disappearence of AChE-containing nerves was observed only after ophthalmic neurotomy. It is suggested that the AChE-containing nerves are distributed to the rat cornea exclusively via the ophthalmic nerve. They seem to be sensory nerves.  相似文献   

16.
Singer DP  Sullivan PK 《Plastic and reconstructive surgery》2003,112(4):1150-4; discussion 1155-6
Submandibular gland resection for aesthetic reasons has been hotly debated. Detractors maintain that the procedure is dangerous because it puts too many important structures at risk, notably motor nerves. The present study was undertaken to elucidate the neurovascular and soft-tissue anatomy of the digastric triangle via cadaver dissections so that a surgical approach to achieve safe aesthetic submandibular resection could be performed. Fifteen digastric triangles dissections were performed in fixed and fresh cadaver specimens. The dissection focus was to understand the submandibular neurovascular relationships, capsule as well as fascial layers, and measurements to known structures. The marginal mandibular nerve is located external to the submandibular capsule, approximately 3.7 cm cephalad to the inferior margin of the gland. The hypoglossal nerve is posterior to the digastric sling in a position that is protected deep within the visceral layer of the neck. The lingual nerve is located underneath the mandibular border, crossing anterior to the submandibular duct. The vascular supply is variant, but with an average of one and a half vessels entering medially to the superficial lobe of the gland, one intermediate vessel entering medially to supply the superficial and deep lobes, and one deep perforator that runs from the central portion of the deep lobe to the superficial lobe. Appreciation of this anatomy is critical in the submental approach for partial resection. Although it can be technically challenging, the anatomy is straightforward and partial submandibular gland resection can be executed via a consistent, safe approach to optimize facial rejuvenation in certain patients.  相似文献   

17.
The trigeminal, the fifth cranial nerve of vertebrates, represents the rostralmost component of the nerves assigned to pharyngeal arches. It consists of the ophthalmic and maxillomandibular nerves, and in jawed vertebrates, the latter is further divided into two major branches dorsoventrally. Of these, the dorsal one is called the maxillary nerve because it predominantly innervates the upper jaw, as seen in the human anatomy. However, developmentally, the upper jaw is derived not only from the dorsal part of the mandibular arch, but also from the premandibular primordium: the medial nasal prominence rostral to the mandibular arch domain. The latter component forms the premaxillary region of the upper jaw in mammals. Thus, there is an apparent discrepancy between the morphological trigeminal innervation pattern and the developmental derivation of the gnathostome upper jaw. To reconcile this, we compared the embryonic developmental patterns of the trigeminal nerve in a variety of gnathostome species. With the exception of the diapsid species studied, we found that the maxillary nerve issues a branch (nasopalatine nerve in human) that innervates the medial nasal prominence derivatives. Because the trigeminal nerve in cyclostomes also possesses a similar branch, we conclude that the vertebrate maxillomandibular nerve primarily has had a premandibular branch as its dorsal element. The presence of this branch would thus represent the plesiomorphic condition for the gnathostomes, implying its secondary loss within some lineages. The branch for the maxillary process, more appropriately called the palatoquadrate component of the maxillary nerve (V2), represents the apomorphic gnathostome trait that has evolved in association with the acquisition of an upper jaw. J. Morphol. 275:17–38, 2014. © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

18.
The development of the tentacle, a chemosensory and perhaps tactile structure unique among vertebrates to gymnophione amphibians is described in Dermophis mexicanus and Gymnopis multiplicata. The tentacle is associated with the vomeronasal organ and its glands, and utilizes several structures usually associated with the eye, such as the Harderian gland, the retractor and levator muscles, and their nerves. Innervation of the tentacle itself is from the trigeminal nerve. We present an hypothesis that the tentacle originated from modified eye components.  相似文献   

19.
The objective of the study was to investigate the morphology, distribution, and electrophysiological profile of the autonomic fibers that innervate the ligament of Marshall (LOM). Gross anatomical dissections were performed in 10 dogs. Sections of the left vagus nerve, left stellate ganglion, and the LOM were immunostained to identify adrenergic and cholinergic nerves. Hearts were also stained for acetylcholinesterase to identify epicardial cholinergic nerves. In vivo electrophysiological studies were performed in another 10 dogs before and after LOM ablation. The anatomical examination revealed that the LOM is innervated by a branch of the left vagus. Immunohistochemistry confirmed that these nerve bundles are predominantly cholinergic (cholinergic-to-adrenergic ratio of 12.6 +/- 3.9:1). Cholinergic nerves originating in the LOM were found to innervate surrounding left atrial structures, including the pulmonary veins, left atrial appendage, coronary sinus, and posterior left atrial fat pad. Ablation of the LOM significantly attenuated effective refractory period shortening at distant sites, such as pulmonary veins and left atrial appendage, in response to vagal stimulation (vagal-induced ERP decrease in the left atrium: baseline vs. postablation = 17 vs. 4%; P = 0.0056). In conclusion, the LOM contains a predominance of cholinergic nerve fibers. Cholinergic fibers arising from the LOM innervate surrounding structures and contribute to the electrophysiological profile of the left atrium. These findings may provide a basis for the role of the LOM in the genesis and maintenance of atrial fibrillation.  相似文献   

20.
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