Appearance of a neural bypass between injured cingulum and brainstem cholinergic nuclei of a patient with traumatic brain injury on follow-up diffusion tensor tractography images  

Appearance of a neural bypass between injured cingulum and brainstem cholinergic nuclei of a patient with traumatic brain injury on follow-up diffusion tensor tractography images

在线阅读下载全文

作  者:Han Do Lee Sung Ho Jang 

机构地区:[1]Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation,College of Medicine,Yeungnam University

出  处:《Neural Regeneration Research》2015年第3期498-500,共3页中国神经再生研究(英文版)

基  金:supported by Basic Science Research Program through the National Research Foundation of Korea(NRF);funded by the Ministry of Education,Science and Technology,No.2012R1A1A4A01001873

摘  要:The human brain is known to contain a maximum of eight cholinergic nuclei: the basal forebrain region: the medial septal nucleus (Ch 1), the vertical nucleus of the diagonal band (Ch 2), the horizontal limb of the diago- nal band (Ch 3), and the nucleus basalis of Meynert (Ch 4); the brainstem: the pedunculopontine nucleus (Ch 5), the laterodorsal tegmental nucleus (Ch 6), and the para- bigeminal nucleus (Ch 8); and the thalamus: the medial habenular nucleus (Ch 7) (Nieuwenhuys et al., 2008; Naidich and Duvernoy, 2009). The cingulum is the neu- ral tract extending from the orbitofrontal cortex to the medial temporal lobe (Mufson and Pandya, 1984). The cingulum plays an important role in memory because it is a passage of the medial cholinergic pathway, which pro- vides cholinergic innervations to the cerebral cortex after originating from Ch 1 and Ch 2 as well as Ch 4 (mainly) (Selden et al., 1998; Nieuwenhuys et al., 2008; Hong and lang, 2010).The human brain is known to contain a maximum of eight cholinergic nuclei: the basal forebrain region: the medial septal nucleus (Ch 1), the vertical nucleus of the diagonal band (Ch 2), the horizontal limb of the diago- nal band (Ch 3), and the nucleus basalis of Meynert (Ch 4); the brainstem: the pedunculopontine nucleus (Ch 5), the laterodorsal tegmental nucleus (Ch 6), and the para- bigeminal nucleus (Ch 8); and the thalamus: the medial habenular nucleus (Ch 7) (Nieuwenhuys et al., 2008; Naidich and Duvernoy, 2009). The cingulum is the neu- ral tract extending from the orbitofrontal cortex to the medial temporal lobe (Mufson and Pandya, 1984). The cingulum plays an important role in memory because it is a passage of the medial cholinergic pathway, which pro- vides cholinergic innervations to the cerebral cortex after originating from Ch 1 and Ch 2 as well as Ch 4 (mainly) (Selden et al., 1998; Nieuwenhuys et al., 2008; Hong and lang, 2010).

关 键 词:Appearance of a neural bypass between injured cingulum and brainstem cholinergic nuclei of a patient with traumatic brain injury on follow-up diffusion tensor tractography images DTI 

分 类 号:R651.15[医药卫生—外科学]

 

参考文献:

正在载入数据...

 

二级参考文献:

正在载入数据...

 

耦合文献:

正在载入数据...

 

引证文献:

正在载入数据...

 

二级引证文献:

正在载入数据...

 

同被引文献:

正在载入数据...

 

相关期刊文献:

正在载入数据...

相关的主题
相关的作者对象
相关的机构对象