Spinal Tract Of Trigeminal


RESULTS: 1) After injection of PRV, PRV-IR positive cells widely distributed in the spinal cord (cervical, thoracic and lumbar segments), brain stem (nucleus of solitary tract, cuneate nucleus, gigantocellular reticular nucleus, nucleus of spinal tract of trigeminal nerve, nucleus raphe magnus, locus caeruleus, etc), hypothalamus and cerebral cortex in each group.  

UBCs and granules are also present in regions previously not included in the GCS, namely the rostrodorsal magnocellular portions of ventral cochlear nucleus, vestibular nerve root, trapezoid body, spinal tract and sensory and principal nuclei of the trigeminal nerve, and cerebellar peduncles.  

Nerve fibers occurred within gracile and cuneate fasciculi, trigeminal spinal tract and nucleus, facial, trigeminal, vestibular and oculomotor nerves, solitary tract, medial longitudinal fasciculus, medial lemniscus, and inferior and superior cerebellar peduncles.  

Predictive factors included the response to pharmacological tests, the relative sparing from the disease process of the cortico-spinal tract and the sensory system, and the analgesic response achieved during the test period of MCS.  

Nerve fibers occurred within gracile and cuneate fasciculi, trigeminal spinal tract and nucleus, oculomotor and facial nerves, solitary tract, vestibular nerve, medial longitudinal fasciculus, medial and lateral lemnisci, and inferior and superior cerebellar peduncles.  

In the rhombencephalon, the granular layer of cerebellum, the vestibulocochlear nuclei, the superior olive, the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve, and parts of the reticular formation showed the most intense reaction in the PN.  

The hypoglossal nucleus showed higher AM expression than that of the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve (P < 0.05), solitary tract nucleus (P < 0.05), nucleus intercalatus (P < 0.05), and area postrema (P < 0.05).  

The propagation of neuronal excitation was measured by changes in fluorescent intensity in horizontal brain stem slices evoked by electrical stimulation to the trigeminal spinal tract.  

iKEPI fiber/terminal patterns are relatively densely distributed in striatum, nucleus accumbens, septum, bed nucleus of the stria terminalis, hippocampus, paraventricular thalamus, ventromedial hypothalamus, interpeduncular nucleus, raphe nuclei, nucleus caudalis of the spinal tract of the trigeminal and dorsal horn of the spinal cord.  

The data indicated that the Vsup and Vint of the mouse contained GABAergic neurons, which received projection fibers from the marginal layer of the nucleus of the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve (Vc) on the ipsilateral side and sent their axons to the Vm on the contralateral side.  

OBJECTIVE: PPTA and c-fos mRNA expression were detected in dog caudalis subnucleus of trigeminal spinal tract nucleus (VC) induced by trauma occlusion in order to investigate orofacial pain mechanism.  

Vasodepressor responses were induced when the caudal ventrolateral medulla, the nucleus tractus solitarius, the lateral tegmental field, the trigeminal nucleus interpolaris, the trigeminal spinal tract, and the paramedian reticular nucleus were stimulated.  

the lateral olfactory tract, olfactory and temporal limb of the anterior commissure, corpus callosum, stria terminalis, globus pallidus, fornix, mammillothalamic tract, solitary tract, and spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve.  

METHODS: The techniques of Immunohistochemistry in situ hybridization and radioimmunoassay were applied respectively to detect the expression of Fos, the transcription of PENK mRNA, and the change of ENK level in the experimental nucleus of the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve, caudal part (sp5c) of rats. The level of ENK increased significantly (P < 0.01) in the caudal part of the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve four hours after pain stimulation.  

This reduction was primarily localized in brain stem regions that correspond to the trigeminal main sensory nucleus, as well as subnucleus oralis, interpolaris, and caudalis of the trigeminal spinal tract nucleus.  

Our recent studies have shown that application to the tooth pulp of the inflammatory irritant mustard oil (MO) produces a prolonged (>40 min) "central sensitization" reflected in neuroplastic changes in the mechanoreceptive field (RF) and response properties of nociceptive brain stem neurons in subnuclei oralis (Vo) and caudalis (Vc) of the trigeminal spinal tract nucleus. A similar volume and concentration of CoCl(2) solution injected into subnucleus interpolaris of the trigeminal spinal tract nucleus did not affect the MO-induced neuroplastic changes in Vo.  

Y1R staining of processes, often fiber and/or dot-like, and occasional cell bodies was also seen in tracts, such as the lateral lemniscus, the rubrospinal tract and the spinal tract of the trigeminal.  

Therefore, they were probably caused by a compression of the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve and the central sympathetic tract by the aneurysm.  

High levels of immunoreactivity were found in the brainstem, mainly in the nucleus tractus solitarius and the nucleus of the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve, and in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord.  

Although thalamic-projecting neurones were recorded extensively throughout the trigeminal sensory complex, they originated most often in the region from the caudal main sensory nucleus to the rostral subnucleus oralis of the trigeminal spinal tract nucleus.  

This finding was compatible with a lesion in the spinal tract-nucleus of the right trigeminal nerve. Cranial MRI showed several areas of high signal intensity in protuberancial calotte and spinal tract-nucleus of the trigeminal nerve.  

The evoked potentials were recorded from the superficial layers of the caudal part of the trigeminal spinal tract nucleus (5ST).  

Numerous amylin-immunoreactive nerve fibers were shown in the trigeminal spinal tract, in the solitary area and in the area postrema.  

The dendritic fields of the PNs extended to laminae I and II of the MDH and occasionally further to the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve, whereas those of the INs were confined within the magnocellular layer of the MDH.  

In contrast, lesions including the trigeminal spinal tract produced no changes in either excitation or inhibition of hypoglossal motoneurons induced by temporalis muscle afferents, whereas the excitation of hypoglossal motoneurons was abolished by the lesions.  

They were divided into two types on the basis of branching patterns of their axons within the MDH: Type I projection (P-I) neurons (n = 7 neurons) had main axons that rarely emitted axon collaterals within the MDH, whereas type II projection (P-II) neurons (n = 6 neurons) had main axons that emitted many axon collaterals within laminae I, II (substantia gelatinosa), and III (magnocellular part) of the MDH and also to the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve; these axon collaterals usually constituted a dense mesh of axonal processes within laminae I and II of the MDH, especially in lamina II.  

We used focal microinjections of pharmacological agents to investigate medullary pathways mediating ear pinna vasoconstriction elicited by electrical stimulation of the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve or by pinching the lip, and pathways mediating mesenteric vasoconstriction elicited by electrical stimulation of the afferent abdominal vagus nerve.  

Immunoautoradiographic labeling of central nervous system sections showed that 5-HT3A-S-like immunoreactivity was found mostly within the nucleus of the solitary tract, the nucleus of the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve, and the dorsal horn of the the spinal cord in the rat.  

Within 22 h after EB injection, there is a 21% decrease in the number of OPCs within affected fiber tracts such as the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve, most likely reflecting the toxic actions of EB.  

Loss or delay of R2-i/R2c-i was seen in lesions covering the entire trigeminal spinal tract and nucleus (TSTN) at at least one level.  

In the brain stem, there were immunoreactive neurons and fibers in the tractus solitarius and nucleus, trigeminal spinal tract and nuclei, periaqueductal gray matter, vestibular nuclei, cochlear nuclei, trapezoid body, medial geniculate nucleus, and red nucleus.  

Similarly, parasympathetic afferents from the pulmonary plexus crossing the nucleus of the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve may be responsible for interexchange of impulses to the neurons in this nucleus.  

The main axons sent collaterals within the SG and rostrally, caudally, or medially to laminae I and III of the MDH, interpolar spinal trigeminal nucleus, spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve, or upper cervical cord segments.  

Nov-positive neurons were detected at G28W in the nucleus of the spinal tract of the trigeminal and cuneate nucleus, and at G38W in the abducens nucleus of pons, the red nucleus and the substantia nigra of the midbrain, the ventral posterolateral and the mediodorsal thalamic nucleus.  

Electrical stimulation of the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve at 5 Hz to elicit the trigeminal depressor response in anesthetized rabbits also causes an acute fall in ear pinna blood flow to near zero levels (from 31+/-8 to 2+/-2 kHz, n = 5, P < 0.01).  

In the upper cervical spinal cord, NPY mRNA signals were confined to the substantia gelatinosa along the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve. In the medulla, NPY images were found in the nucleus of solitary tract, dorsal motor nucleus of vagus nerve, nucleus of the spinal tract of trigeminal nerve, lateral reticular nucleus and the reticular formation.  

the habenulo-interpeduncular tract, decussation of the dorsal tegmentum, the medial longitudinal fasciculus, transverse pontine fibers, the brachium conjunctivum and the inferior cerebellar peduncle were cadherin-8 positive, as were the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve, oculomotor nerve, facial nerve and trigeminal nerve.  

We analyzed nine nervous pathways: corpus callosum, optic tract, internal capsule, spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve, inferior cerebellar peduncle, cerebellar white matter, pyramidal tract, medial longitudinal fasciculus, and cuneate fasciculus. The presence of immunoreactive fibers for proteolipid protein (PLP) in the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve, medial longitudinal fasciculus and cuneate fasciculus was noted on postnatal day 0. The time required to reach the intensity of myelination of day 42 was day 14 for the cuneate fasciculus, day 21 for the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve, inferior cerebellar peduncle and medial longitudinal fasciculus, day 28 for the optic and pyramidal tracts, day 35 for the corpus callosum and day 42 for the internal capsule and cerebellar white matter.  

Especially abundant fiber- and terminal-like patterns were localized to superficial layers of the spinal cord dorsal horn and nucleus caudalis of the spinal tract of the trigeminal, the nucleus of the solitary tract, nucleus ambiguous, locus coeruleus, interpeduncular nucleus, medial aspect of the lateral habenular nucleus, presumed "striasomes" of the caudate-putamen and nucleus accumbens.  

Nur77 signal was also detected in the nucleus of the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve.  

The house shrew, Suncus murinus, is an excellent species in which to study this topic because it has a vibrissae system arranged in a single ordered fashion and extraordinarily well-developed trigeminal spinal tracts. Dorsoventral inversion of the peripheral pattern in the spinal tract occurs with this dual-leveled bifurcation in association with the mediolaterally ordered entry of the central processes into the brainstem.  

We analyzed nine nervous pathways: corpus callosum, optic tract, internal capsule, spinal tract of trigeminal nerve, inferior cerebellar peduncle, cerebellar white matter, pyramidal tract, medial longitudinal fasciculus, and cuneate fasciculus. The onset of the myelination of the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve, inferior cerebellar peduncle, medial longitudinal fasciculus and cuneate fasciculus was day 7 (postnatal). The time required to reach the level of myelination of day 42 was day 21 for the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve and the inferior cerebellar peduncle, day 28 for the internal capsule, day 35 for the corpus callosum, optic tract, cerebellar white matter and pyramidal tract, and day 42 for the medial longitudinal fasciculus.  

Serotonin1A receptor-like immunoreactivity was also present, but at a moderate level, in the neocortex, in some thalamic and hypothalamic nuclei, in the nucleus of the solitary tract, in the dorsal tegmentum, in the nucleus of the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve, and in the superficial layers of the dorsal horn in the spinal cord.  

A combination of immunocytochemical and electron microscopic methods were employed to assess the organization of the trigeminal (V) spinal tract in adult rats. Results from these experiments indicated that larger myelinated axons were distributed throughout the cross-sectional extent of the V spinal tract (TrV), whereas smaller fibers were most numerous just below the pial surface.  

In the brain high levels of binding were localized over the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN), the area postrema (AP), and the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve (Sp5).  

In the macaque lower brainstem, many nitric oxide synthase-containing cell bodies were found in the gigantocellular and parvocellular reticular nuclei, the nucleus of the spinal tract of trigeminal nerve, the cochlear nucleus, the prepositus hypoglossi and the nucleus of the solitary tract.  

The localization of GABAA receptor gamma 1 and gamma 2 subunits and the AMPA-type glutamate receptor subunits GluR1 and GluR2/3 were identified in the caudal trigeminal spinal tract nucleus (TNC) by immunohistochemistry using specific antibodies.  

GAT1 was distributed throughout the brain with the highest amount in the olfactory bulb, CA3 region of the hippocampus, layer I of the cerebral cortex, piriform cortex, superior colliculus, interpeduncular nucleus and nucleus spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve, while the GAT3 was densely found in the olfactory bulb, thalamus, hypothalamus, pons and medulla, globus pallidus, central gray, substantia nigra, deep cerebellar nuclei and nucleus spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve but not in the hippocampus, cerebral cortex, caudate-putamen and cerebellar cortex.  

The intense oxidase reactions were present in the red nucleus, oculomotor nucleus, trochlear nucleus, ventral nucleus of the lateral lemniscus, dorsal and ventral cochlear nuclei, vestibular nuclei, nuclei of posterior funiculus, nucleus of the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve, lateral reticular nucleus, inferior olivary nucleus, and hypoglossal nucleus.  

Such region-specific expressions were also discerned in the central gray, the superior and inferior colliculi, the medial accessory oculomotor nucleus, the locus ceruleus, the parabrachial nucleus, nucleus of the solitary tract, the caudal subnucleus of the trigeminal spinal tract nucleus, and the inferior olive.  

The retrogradely labelled cells were located in the ipsilateral parvocellular reticular formation (PCRt), dorsolateral to the facial nucleus and medial to the nucleus of the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve.  

Immunoreactive fibres were found in the medial forebrain bundle, the globus pallidus, the stria terminalis, the pyramidal tract, the spinal tract of trigeminal nerve, and the ventral horn of spinal cord.  

The crossed depression of AFP was significantly diminished after the destruction of the caudal part of the contralateral trigeminal mesencephalic nucleus, but not by the lesion of the trigeminal spinal tract. The most rostral level in the trigeminal spinal tract nucleus, where the HRP-labelled axon terminals were found after its injection into the LP muscle, was located caudally to the lesion of the spinal tract.  

Labeled cells were also observed in the major subdivisions of the amygdaloid complex, the olfactory bulb, the trochlear nerve nucleus, the dorsal tegmental region, the facial nerve nucleus, the nucleus of the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve, and the spinal cord dorsal horn.  

Immunopositive cells were relatively abundant in the marginal and gelatinosa beds of the caudal part of the trigeminal spinal tract nucleus, and in the dorsomedial areas of the oral subnucleus and the principal nucleus.  

In situ hybridization using cDNAs complementary to specific regions of the mRNAs encoding four members of the FOS transcription factor gene family reveals modest levels of hybridization over superficial lamina of the nucleus caudalis of the spinal tract of the trigeminal in sections taken from unstimulated brains.  

CGRP-like immunoreactivity (CGRPLI) was present in axons that occupied the outer V spinal tract (TrV) at all levels of the V brainstem complex.  

When NB was injected into V ganglion cells with low- or high-threshold receptive fields and A-beta or A-delta conduction velocities, parent axons were stained in the V spinal tract to the level of the obex, and collaterals were visible in each of the 4 V subnuclei.  

In the lower brain stem, the signals were detected in the inferior colliculus, the spinal vestibular nucleus, the spinal tract nucleus of trigeminal nerve, and the pyramidal tract.  

It was shown in experiments on rats that penicillin 1 microliter microinjection (100 U) into the caudal nucleus of the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve, accounting for formation of a generator of pathologically enhanced excitation (GREE), brings about in rats the pain syndrome with characteristic for trigeminal neuralgia behavioural manifestations and the emergence of epileptiform activity in the somatosensory cortex, especially pronounced in the contralateral hemisphere.  

The highest density of 5-HT3 sites was found in the nucleus tractus solitarius followed by, in decreasing order, the dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus nerve, the superficial layers of the dorsal horn in the spinal cord, the nucleus of the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve, and the area postrema.  

The conjectured reflex is considered to be mediated via afferent fibers to the spinal tract and nucleus of the fifth cranial nerve, synapsing with the brainstem reticular core in the medulla and/or pons.  

Bundles of immunoreactive fibres and dot-like nerve terminals occur in the spinal tract and superficial and deep regions of the spinal trigeminal nucleus.  

In view of the recent documentation of deep craniofacial afferent inputs, as well as cutaneous afferent inputs to the trigeminal (V) spinal tract nucleus, we wished to determine the effects of deep inputs excited by the small-fibre irritant mustard oil on trigeminal nociceptive neurones. The extracellular activity of single brain-stem neurones was recorded in subnuclei caudalis and oralis of the V spinal tract nucleus of anaesthetized rats.  

In the present study terminal degeneration was observed in both the nucleus of the tractus solitarius and the nucleus of the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve after transection of the nerve and after injection of a lectin, Ricinus communis agglutinin (RCA).  

Degenerating fibers were found throughout the spinal tract following a trigeminal rhizotomy or tractotomy, with the largest numbers adjacent to the rostral two-thirds of Vc, but with a significant number extending caudally to at least the level of C2. Following a combined trigmeninal and cervical tractotomy, fiber degeneration was massive throughout the spinal tract, yet a population of small myelinated fibers persisted at 60 days after surgery.  

Trigeminocerebellar neurons in the interpolaris subnucleus of the nucleus of the trigeminal spinal tract and neurons of the lateral reticular nucleus were not labelled until E22 and P0, respectively.  

In situ hybridization using cDNAs complementary to specific regions of the mRNAs encoding 3 members of the jun transcription factor gene family and c-fos reveals modest levels of hybridization over superficial laminae of the nucleus caudalis of the spinal tract of the trigeminal in sections taken from unstimulated brains.  

CGRP-immunoreactive fibers were found to be densest in the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve and the dorsal horn of the spinal cord.  

Neurons relaying trigeminal inputs to SRV neurons were electrophysiologically identified in the nucleus reticularis parvocellularis which is ventromedially adjacent to the subnuclei oralis and interpolaris of the trigeminal spinal tract nucleus.  

Most projections in this study originated from fibers in the dorsal part of the spinal tract of V, suggesting a predominantly mandibular origin for these fibers.  

It is continuous with the nucleus of the spinal tract of V anteriorly, and with the spinal trigeminal nucleus posteriorly..  

Periodontal mechanosensitive (PM) units were recorded from the trigeminal spinal tract nucleus (Vst) of the cat.  

The remaining afferent fibers formed a thin bundle in the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve, which had a short ascending limb and a long descending limb. These two bundles had terminal areas in the ipsilateral brainstem: in the dorsal gray matter for the solitary fasciculus and in the lateral funiculus for the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve, respectively.  

Specific binding was quite low throughout most of the brains from these species; however, in all but the guinea pig, dense streaks of binding were detected in nucleus of the solitary tract (and in the mouse, the nucleus of the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve).  

4) After injection of WGA-HRP into the ventral portion of the PVG, many labeled cells were found in the contralateral subnucleus caudalis in the spinal tract of the trigeminal nucleus (NTST) where termination of the pulpal afferent was previously reported.  

All of the axons had bifurcating fibers that ascended in the ascending tract (ascending fiber) and descended in the trigeminal spinal tract (descending fiber).  

The results indicate that afferent fibres for S1, which reach the pons via the trigeminal sensory root, enter the ipsilateral trigeminal spinal tract and terminate at the level of the midpons; impulses are then relayed by interneurons to the ipsilateral and contralateral trigeminal motor nuclei.  

3) Effects of the transection of the trigeminal spinal tract on the above masseteric responses were also analysed. 3) The effects of the transection of the trigeminal spinal tract were similar to those of the trigeminal deafferentation. 3) The contribution of the periodontal afferents which descended through the trigeminal spinal tract was suggested to be involved in the facilitatory response of the masseter muscle during chewing a strip..  

of the vagus, hypoglossal n., inferior olivary n., prepositus hypoglossus n., solitary tract n., nuclei of the spinal tract of the trigeminal n., and the lateral, medial, and superior vestibular nuclei.  

Horseradish peroxidase (HRP) injections into the V ganglion or V brainstem complex anterogradely labeled a fascicle of primary afferent axons that exited the caudal ventrolateral V spinal tract to form a rostrocaudally continuous, transversely oriented, V primary afferent decussation.  

Intersubnuclear axons most frequently traveled in the deep bundles within the TBNC, the V spinal tract, and the reticular formation.  

Type 1- and type 2c-like cells constitute the uncrossed tecto-bulbo-spinal tract, whereas type 1- and type 2a-like cells and migrated large spindle-shaped cells (Salamandra) constitute the crossed tecto-bulbo-spinal tract.  

When the assessment was confined to the solitary tract nucleus and the spinal tract nucleus of the trigeminal nerve a positive result was obtained in 99.6 per cent of confirmed cases of BSE and only 1 per cent of brains in which lesions of BSE were not detected gave a false positive result.  

Among them, the nucleus of trigeminal spinal tract interpolaris (SP51) had the highest number of TTT cells, and the internal basilar nucleus (IB) comprised the largest population of STT cells.  

The afferent fibres projected to the caudal end of subnucleus interpolaris of trigeminal spinal tract nucleus, then send the secondary neurons to the lateral and medial of bulbar reticular formation and pontine reticular formation.  

Effects of deafferentation of the tooth pulps of the posterior mandibular teeth were studied in single neurons recorded in the ipsilateral subnucleus caudalis of the trigeminal (V) spinal tract nucleus of adult cats and kittens. However, some of the changes are in general not inconsistent with deafferentation-induced changes reported in spinal somatosensory neurons and with the pulp deafferentation-induced changes that we have recently documented in LTM neurons of subnucleus oralis of the V spinal tract nucleus of adult cats.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS).  

The concentrations of neuropeptide Y immunoreactivity were measured in microdissected regions enriched in noradrenergic (A1, A2, A6) and adrenergic (C1, C2, C3) nuclei of the brainstem, and in the nucleus of the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve (Sp5C) of spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) and Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) rats at 8, 18 and 31 weeks of age.  

Immunoreactive neurons were present in the anterior olfactory nucleus, olfactory tubercle, amygdaloid complex, caudate-putamen, accumbens nucleus, claustrum, dorsal part of the lateral septal nucleus, CA1 region of the hippocampus, subiculum, medial habenular nucleus, cerebral cortex, nucleus of the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve, nucleus of the solitary tract, and substantia gelatinosa of the spinal cord.  

Coarse, often varicose CGRP-ir fibres were most prominent in the X and IX cranial nerve rootlets, the spinal tract of the V nerve and the solitary tract, and also in the V spinal nucleus and nucleus of the solitary tract.  

The ganglion physiology experiments were augmented by records from primary afferents in the trigeminal spinal tract (TrV).  

It was revealed that the cortico-spinal tract presumably formed the locomotor strip.  

A circadian rhythm is found in the anterior cingulate cortex, hippocampal cortex, periventricular, medial, ventral, reticular and posterior nuclei of the thalamus, rhomboid, gelatinosus and rheuniens nuclei, lateral hypothalamus, locus coeruleus, grey substance of the pons, reticular formation of medulla oblongata, inferior olivary complex, medial part of the nucleus of the solitary tract and nucleus of the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve.  

Moderate increases (20-50%) were observed in the reticular nucleus of the medulla, paramedian lobule, nucleus of the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve, presubiculum, subiculum, red nucleus, ventral tegmental area, substantia nigra, nucleus ambiguus, nucleus tractus solitarius, dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus, mammillothalamic tract, and fornix.  

Calcitonin gene-related peptide-like immunoreactivity was first detected in the fibers of the nucleus of spinal tract trigeminal nerve on gestational day 18, and thereafter appeared gradually in various brain stem areas such as in the fibers of the solitary tract, gracile nucleus, cuneate nucleus, inferior colliculus, superior colliculus, medial geniculate nucleus and in the neurons of the hypoglossal nucleus, facial nucleus, superior olive, parabrachial area, superior colliculus and peripeduncular nucleus.  

The extracellular activity of 196 single neurons in subnucleus caudalis (medullary dorsal horn) of the trigeminal (V) spinal tract nucleus was examined in chloralose-anesthesized, paralyzed cats.  

The afferent projections were rather strong in the regions of laminae I-V of C2, the caudal subnucleus of the nucleus of the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve (NVSpc), the solitary nucleus (SN), the medial and lateral cuneate nuclei, etc.  

Extracellular single-unit activity was recorded from 250 trigeminal (V) spinal tract nucleus neurons that were excited by electrical stimulation of the middle meningeal artery (MMA) and/or sagittal sinus (SS) in anesthetized cats. These findings indicate that sensory afferents that innervate the dural arteries and venous sinuses are capable of activating neurons throughout the V spinal tract nucleus.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS).  

The greatest density of the immunoreactive material was seen in the following regions: the olfactory bulb (external plexiform layer), olfactory tuberculum, anterior olfactory nucleus, cerebral cortex (layers I and IV), pyriform cortex, hippocampus (strata radiatum and oriens), amygdaloid complex (central and basolateral nuclei), cerebellar cortex (molecular layer), dorsal cochlear nucleus, nucleus spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve, and dorsal horn of the spinal cord (substantia gelatinosa). Immunoreactive perikarya were found in the following areas: the cerebral cortex (layers V and VI), caudate putamen, hippocampus, thalamus, amygdaloid complex, medial and lateral geniculate nucleus, superior colliculus, cerebellar cortex, nucleus spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve, dorsal cochlear nucleus, and dorsal horn of the spinal cord.  

Sensory fibers of the trigeminal nerve formed the familiar spinal tract, which partially decussated in the medullospinal transition zone and could be followed as far as the lumbar segments on the ipsilateral side of the spinal cord. Neurons of the mesencephalic root of the trigeminal nerve were localized in the optic tectum; their descending fibers joined the medial aspect of the spinal tract.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS).  

The HRP-labeled axons were found to be ipsilaterally terminated in the trigeminal motor nucleus, supratrigeminal nucleus and trigeminal main and spinal tract nuclei, lateral pontine-medullary reticular formation, vagal dorsal motor and hypoglossal nuclei and the lamina V of the C2 spinal cord segments. The HRP-labeled axon bundle of the facial proprioceptive neurons are divided rostro-caudally into the shorter ascending and the longer descending roots, both running closely dorsal to the trigeminal spinal tract nucleus. The ascending root lies adjacently dorsal to the spinal tract nucleus, giving off the terminal fibers to it, to the wider area of the dorso-medial pontine nuclei and finally to the cerebellar nuclei. The HRP-labeled descending root takes the course caudally at least down to the C3 segment of the spinal cord, giving off the terminal fibers to the spinal tract nucleus, the nuclei of the IXth, Xth and XIIth cranial nerves and the pontine-medullary reticular formation.  

Transganglionic degeneration of the fibers was found not only in the main sensory nucleus and spinal tract nucleus of the trigeminal nerve but throughout the cervical and the upper part of the thoracic spinal cord.  

Nalbuphine did not produce these effects, but stimulated LCGU in nuclei of the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve and in the globus pallidus.  

In autoradiographic experiments, L-365,031 displaced 125I-Bolton Hunter CCK-8 binding from the interpeduncular nucleus (IPN) (IC50 = 7 X 10(-8) M), the area postrema (AP), and the nucleus tractus solitarius (NTS) without influencing specific binding to other areas, such as the cerebral cortex or the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve.  

The central fibers of the corneal afferent neurons projected very heavily to interstitial nuclei of Cajal in the spinal tract of V at the level of caudal pars interpolaris and rostral pars caudalis, lightly to the pars caudalis/C1 transition zone, and sparsely to the dorsal horn of spinal cord segments C1-C3.  

Dense accumulation of immunoreactive perikarya and fibers was seen in the nuclei associated with special sensory and visceral functions, such as the interpeduncular nucleus, the parabrachial nucleus, the nucleus of the solitary tract, and the nucleus of the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve.  

Besides the CRFI cells in the paraventricular hypothalamic nucleus that project to the median eminence, CRFI cells were demonstrated in many brain regions, including the olfactory bulb, cerebral cortex, septal nuclei, hippocampus, amygdala, thalamic nuclei, medial hypothalamic nuclei, lateral hypothalamic area, perifornical area, central gray, cuneiform nucleus, inferior colliculus, raphe nuclei, mesencephalic reticular formation, laterodorsal tegmental nucleus, locus coeruleus, parabrachial nuclei, mesencephalic tract of the trigeminal nerve, pontine reticular formation, lateral superior olive, vestibular nuclei, prepositus hypoglossal nucleus, nucleus of the solitary tract, dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus, lateral reticular nucleus, nucleus of the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve, external cuneate nucleus, inferior olive, and medullary reticular formation.  

The UEAI-positive trigeminal afferent fibers traveled through the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve and terminated predominantly at the superficial laminae of the caudal region of the nucleus of the spinal trigeminal tract.  

Moderate levels of converting enzyme occurred in the gelatinosus subnucleus of the caudal part of the nucleus of the spinal tract of the trigeminal.  

The trigeminal sensibility seems to be affected early in the rheumatoid atlanto-axial subluxation and progresses with the severity of the subluxation, possibly due to bony compression of the trigeminal spinal tract at C 1 level..  

Very few labeled fibers were observed in the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve below the obex.  

The following areas were newly identified as areas rich in CHAT-I fibers: the interpeduncular nucleus, medial geniculate body, central gray matter of pons, pontine nucleus, parabigeminal nucleus, dorsal tegmental nucleus of Gudden, lateral trapezoid nucleus, inferior colliculus, dorsal and ventral cochlear nuclei, medial and lateral vestibular nuclei, reticular formation of medulla oblongata, and gelatinosa of caudal trigeminal spinal tract nucleus. In addition to the areas in which they have been known to exist, CHAT-I perikarya were found in the caudal portion of substantia nigra pars reticulata, the area between trigeminal motor nucleus and superior olivary nucleus, the medial and spinal vestibular nucleus, prepositus hypoglossal nucleus, raphe magnus and obscurus, ventromedial portion of solitary tract nucleus and its just ventral reticular formation, and caudal trigeminal spinal tract nucleus..  

Electrical activity of single vibrissa-activated neurons was recorded in pars interpolaris and pars oralis of the nucleus of the trigeminal spinal tract of rats.  

Since we have recently shown that tooth pulp deafferentation results in changes in the receptive field properties and activity of brain-stem neurones in the adult cat's subnucleus oralis of the trigeminal (V) spinal tract nucleus, we wished to determine if these changes are associated with alterations in the powerful inhibitory influence that the nucleus raphe magnus (NRM) normally exerts on these neurones and on the related digastric jaw-opening reflex.  

The effects of deafferentation of the tooth pulps of mandibular or maxillary teeth were investigated on the functional properties of single neurons recorded in the subnucleus oralis of the trigeminal (V) spinal tract nucleus of adult cats.  

Neurons activated by multiple vibrissae were unique, however, in that one sent its axon into the medial lemniscus, and three projected into the trigeminal spinal tract.  

The effects of hypothyroidism on the development of the spinal tract of V and its relation to early fetal behavior were studied in rats from day 16 through day 20 of gestation. The position, size, and caudal extent of the ophthalmic and maxillomandibular divisions of the spinal tract of V were analyzed in detail with the aid of graphic reconstructions from serial sections of representative cases of both control and experimental fetuses. The ophthalmic and maxillomandibular divisions of the spinal tract of V at 15 days in the control group of fetuses extended into the second and fourth cervical spinal segments respectively, while by 19 days, both divisions of the spinal tract of V extended as far as the fourth cervical segment. It could be demonstrated that the caudal extent of the spinal tract of V corresponded very closely to the behavior repertoire seen in the fetuses of that age. We propose (1) that the spinal tract of V, in its relation with the upper cervical spinal cord levels which contain motor neurons of the spinal accessory nucleus and motor neurons which innervate the dorsal neck muscles, could play a decisive role in the integration of head and shoulder movements in early stages of development, and (2) that thyroid hormone may play a crucial role in the normal development of the spinal tract of V which is manifest in its caudal growth into upper cervical levels of the spinal cord..  

Along its course, the pyramidal tract sent a small number of axons to the ipsilateral and contralateral nucleus of the 7th cranial nerve, while the fibres running from the opposite side to the reticular formation and to the hypoglossal nerve nucleus, cuneatus, gracilis and trigeminal spinal tract nuclei were more numerous..  

Using 125I-SI-AII, specific binding for SI-AII was found in the nucleus tractus solitarius (NTS), paraventricular hypothalamic nucleus (PVN), subfornical organ (SFO), suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN), area postrema, the dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus (DMX), and the nucleus of spinal tract of the trigeminal system (NSV).  

Even if the longitudinal aspect of this nucleus is not uniform, it must be pointed out that the three branches of the trigeminal nerve are represented along this course through the trigeminal spinal tract.  

It has been found that the surface-recorded W1, W2 and W3 waves correspond respectively to the activity of the point of entry of the maxillary nerve into the gasserian ganglion, the point of entry of the trigeminal root into the pons and the presynaptic portion of the trigeminal spinal tract.  

Among extrahypothalamic regions, the substantia nigra, dorsal tegmental nucleus, cuneiform nucleus, dorsal parabrachial nucleus, spinal tract trigeminal nerve, interior olive, solitary nucleus, and layers I and II of the spinal cord contained 7B2-immunoreactive material.  

In the medulla oblongata, the nuclei most affected were the gracile and cuneate nuclei and the nucleus of the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve; in the midbrain, degeneration was mainly observed in the superior and inferior colliculi.  

No evidence of vagal afferent fibres was found in the reticular formation, the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve, the external cuneate nucleus or the dorsal horns of the first and second cervical spinal segments.  

Experiments conducted after large HRP deposits invading almost all the collicular layers resulted in the labeling of visual centers (cortical areas 17, 18 and 18a, ventral lateral geniculate nucleus, nucleus of the posterior commissure, nucleus of the optic tract, anterior and olivary pretectal nuclei, parabigeminal nucleus); somatosensory centers (cortical area SmI, principal and spinal tract trigeminal nuclei) auditory centers (auditory cortex, inferior colliculus and nuclei of the lateral lemniscus) and various other centers (zona incerta, substantia nigra, cingulate and motor cortices, and some hypothalamic, thalamic, pontine reticular and deep cerebellar nuclei). Deposits limited to the deep SC layers resulted in the labeling of a smaller number of structures: visual centers (cortical area 18a, nucleus of the posterior commissure, parabigeminal nucleus); somatosensory centers (cortical area SmI, principal and spinal tract trigeminal nuclei); auditory centers (inferior colliculus, nuclei of the lateral lemniscus); and various other centers (zona incerta, substantia nigra, cingulate cortex, some hypothalamic nuclei, posterior thalamic nucleus, central gray, cuneiformis and subcuneiformis nuclei, pontine reticular nucleus pars oralis).  

Transganglionic sensory fibers course with the tractus solitarius and spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve to end in the respective nucleus associated with the tract..  

Other entering sensory fibers turn caudally within the medulla, forming the trigeminal spinal tract, and terminate within the descending trigeminal nucleus. Fibers of the trigeminal spinal tract descend through the lateral alar medulla and into the dorsolateral cervical spinal cord. Fibers exit the spinal tract throughout its length, projecting to the ventral descending trigeminal nucleus (DTNv) in the medulla and to the funicular nucleus at the obex.  

Precise, statistical computer-generated drawings are provided of the three-dimensional anatomy of the nuclear complex and spinal tract of the fifth cranial nerve, as well as adjacent structures.  

The activity of 160 single neurons excited by electrical stimulation of the canine tooth pulp was studied in the subnucleus caudalis (medullary dorsal horn) and the subnucleus oralis of the trigeminal (V) spinal tract nucleus in chloralose-anesthetized cats to test the effects of natural as well as electrical stimulation of the tooth pulp.  

In view of continuing uncertainties concerning the organization, afferent inputs, and projection sites of neurons in the subnucleus interpolaris of the trigeminal (V) spinal tract nucleus, the characteristics of 222 single neurons in and adjacent to the subnucleus were examined electrophysiologically in adult cats anesthetized with chloralose.  

The spontaneous activity and the inputs to the medial basal hypothalamus (MBH) following dorsal raphe (DR), spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve (SpV), medial lemniscus (ML), reticular lateral magnocellular nucleus ( RLM ) and acoustic (Ac) stimulation and the effects of morphine and the opioid antagonist, naloxone, on these inputs, were investigated in morphine-naive and morphine-dependent animals.  

A smaller portion of afferents from both IX and X did not enter the solitary tract but descended in the spinal tract of V and the dorsolateral funiculus of the spinal cord (Lissauer's tract) to thoracic levels.  

In the medulla, including the nucleus of the solitary tract, the dorsal nucleus of the vagus, and the nucleus of the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve, the amount of oxytocin was greater than that of vasopressin.  

The main afferents arise from the following structures: sensorimotor cortex, zona incerta, thalamic ventrobasal complex, pretectum, intermediate and deep layers of the superior colliculus, nucleus suprageniculatus, nucleus ruber and perirubral area, mesencephalic reticular formation, nucleus interstitialis of Cajal, nucleus tegmenti pedunculopontinus, nucleus reticularis pontis, sensorial and spinal tract trigeminal nuclei.  

Histopathologic examination of the brain stems of treated rats showed that necrotic lesions were present primarily in the nuclei of the tegmentum of the fourth ventricle, with scattered nuclear involvement in the cerebellar roof nuclei, inferior olive, and nucleus of the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve.  

In the medulla oblongata HRP labeled structures were observed in the medial cuneate nucleus, in the rostral part of the external cuneate nucleus, and in the nucleus of the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve.  

The trigeminal nuclear complex and its spinal tract extend throughout the greater part of the brain-stem and at medullary levels form the target site for producing stereotactic lesions.  

CNS degeneration in the dorsal funiculus, spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve, and solitary tract was secondary to loss of primary sensory neurons.  

The familiar somatotopic arrangement of fibers and terminals of the three divisions of the trigeminal nerve was recognized both in the spinal tract and in the nuclear complex of the trigeminus. The spinal tract could be traced as far as the 3rd cervical segment of the spinal cord where fibers crossed to the contralateral side.  

Uptake of 2DG increased in left nucleus of the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve (ntV) ventrally in subnuclei interpolaris and oralis.  

Herpes simplex virus (HSV) injection into the snout of mice was followed by the appearance of HSV antigen in neurons in trigeminal ganglia, main sensory and spinal tract trigeminal nuclei, reticular formation including raphe nuclei and locus ceruleus on both sides.  

Audible sounds of considerably longer latencies were produced exclusively by stimulation of the trigeminal spinal tract nucleus.  

There was partial loss of myelinated nerve fibres in each branch and also in the spinal tract of the fifth nerve in the brain stem.  

Degeneration of sensory nerve fibers in peripheral nerves, dorsal columns of the spinal cord and the descending spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve was apparent.  

In cats anesthetized with urethane, all-or-nothing, synaptically evoked recordings were made from 80 separate units in the descending spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve above the left trigeminal nucleus caudalis, at depths not exceeding 50 micrometer from the surface of the medulla.  

Stimulation electrodes were placed in the dorsal raphe (DR) and spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve (SpV).  

The ventral group of the princeps and spinal tract (mainly IDV) nuclei projects to all lobules studied in vermis and hemispheres.  

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. 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 paratrigeminal nucleus, a diffuse collection of neurons on the lateral medullary surface, lies embedded in the fibres of the restiform body, ascending spinocerebellar tract and the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve.  

Below threshold stimulation the TDR can only be elicited from the root entry zone of the Vth nerve, from dorsal portions of the spinal tract of the Vth nerve, and to portions of the nucleus of the spinal tract, notably the nucleus caudalis.  

NAS, but not M, was found in the granule layer of the cerebellum, spinal tract of the trigeminal roots and the pontal and spinal reticular formation.  

The trigeminal nuclear complex--the nucleus of the spinal tract and the mesencephalic, principal sensory, and motor nuclei--all provide uncrossed afferents.  

Of particular note was the observation that the degenerating fibers in the region of the nucleus of the spinal tract of the trigeminal nerve terminated in glomeruli in the rostral portion of the nucleus.  

As far as the nucleus of the spinal tract is concerned, slight changes were found, mainly contralaterally, in its oral subnucleus only.  


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