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The striatum of the opossum, Didelphis virginiana . Description and experimental studies
Author(s) -
Martin G. F.,
Hamel Earl G.
Publication year - 1967
Publication title -
journal of comparative neurology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.855
H-Index - 209
eISSN - 1096-9861
pISSN - 0021-9967
DOI - 10.1002/cne.901310408
Subject(s) - putamen , claustrum , globus pallidus , caudate nucleus , biology , anatomy , basal ganglia , opossum , anterior commissure , neuroscience , striatum , cytoarchitecture , commissure , central nervous system , nucleus , dopamine
The relationships and cytoarchitecture of the putamen, the caudate, the claustrum, the globus pallidus and the entopeduncular nuclei have been described for the opossum. The neocortical projections to these nuclei have ben studied by employing the Nauta‐Gygax technique ('54) and the Swank Davenport modification of the Marchi technique ('34) on animals in which neocortical lesions were previously placed. Degenerating fibers from every cortical lesion were observed to terminate in both the putamen and the caudate with the Nauta‐Gygax technique, whereas such connections were traced only to putamen woth the Marchi method. Terminations were present within the claustrum, but equivocal in the globus pallidus. In general, fibers from the more rostral cortices terminate in the rostral parts of both striatal nuclei, whereas fibers from more caudal neocortical areas project to more caudal parts of these same nuclei. In addition, the more dorsal or dorsomedial neocortical areas distribute more fibers to the caudate than to the putamen, whereas the opposite is true for the ventral or ventrolateral neocortical areas. Neocortical fibers did not project to the ventral, medial part of the head of the caudate which was cytoarchitectually different from the rest of the nucleus. A few fascicles of frontal, orbital and parietal origin terminated in the contralateral putamen and caudate after having decussated in the anterior commissure.