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Medullary cells of origin of vagal cardioinhibitory fibers in the pigeon. I. Anatomical studies of peripheral vagus nerve and the dorsal motor nucleus

74

Citations

25

References

1970

Year

Abstract

Abstract The organization to the dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus in the pigeon was studied in an attempt to localize the cells of origin of vagal cardioinhibitory fibers. The course of the peripheral vagus nerve is described form the intracranial rootlets to abdominal levels. Using combined microdissection and electrical stimulation techniques, the branches which mediate cardiodeceleration are found to arise from a localized segment of the vagal trunk below the thoracic ganglion, and above the level where the left and right vagi join. The dorsal motor nucleus, its cytoarchitectonic divisions, and other structures connected with vagal rootlets are described on the basis of normal material. Utilizing the above findings a series of retrograde degeneration experiments was undertaken. The distribution of chromatolytic neurons following cervical vagotomy was described to indicate the extent of the dorsal motor nucleus. Selective nerve sections (abdominal vagotomy, cardiac vagotomy, recurrent laryngeal neurotomy, or pneumonectomy) then indicated that there is an incompletely inverted topographic representation of the vagus nerve in the dorsal motor nucleus, including a representation of the recurrent laryngeal nerve; no evidence was found for the existence of a nucleus ambiguus. The vagal cardioinhibitory fibers appear to be represented throughout the rostral half of the nucleus, but they are most concentrated in the ventral portion of the nucleus, approximately three‐quarters of a millimeter rostral to the obex.

References

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