The Directions of Ciliary Beat on the Wall of the Fourth Ventricle in the Mouse
- 1 January 1977
- journal article
- research article
- Published by International Society of Histology & Cytology in Archivum histologicum japonicum
- Vol. 40 (4) , 283-296
- https://doi.org/10.1679/aohc1950.40.283
Abstract
Directions of ciliary beat on the wall of the 4th ventricle in the mouse were observed by scanning electron microscopy. The direction of ciliary beat was definite in the ventricle: it was either toward the central canal or toward the lateral apertures of the 4th ventricle. In the anterior half of the 4th ventricular floor the cilia beat posteriorly in the paramedian part which forms the bilateral banks of the median sulcus, but they beat either posteromedially toward the central fovea or posteriorly to posterolaterally toward the lateral aperture in the more lateral part. The central fovea is connected to the central canal by a channel-like groove which coincides with the median sulcus of the posterior half of the floor. In the area immediately lateral to anterolateral to the central fovea, the cilia beat anteriorly, anteromedially to medially like a swirl. In the anterior part of the posterior half of the floor which corresponds to the bar of the letter "T," most of the cilia in the more medial part except the median part beat anterolaterally, anteriorly of even anteromedially, but the cilia in the more lateral part beat laterally toward the lateral aperture. In the narrow posterior process of the posterior half of the floor the cilia in the paramedian banks along the channel-like groove as well as the cilia in the bottom beat posteriorly toward the central canal; the cilia in the more lateral margin beat anteriorly toward the reverse direction, but this may not be contradictory to the current of the CSF. The roof of the 4th ventricular area was divided into 2 parts: the wall of the recess of the inferior colliculi which consisted of the posterior continuation of the cerebral aqueduct and the anterior part of the superior medullary velum, and the roof of the 4th ventricle proper consisting of the posterior part of the superior medullary velum, the inferior medullary velum and the choroid plexus of the 4th ventricle. The surface of the posterior continuation of the cerebral aqueduct and the superior and inferior medullary vela were covered with numerous cilia except in the midline, and the directions of ciliary beat seemed to be generally in accordance with those on the floor. The ciliary beat may regulate the direction of CSF in the ventricle. The funnel-like shape of the 4th ventricular floor may also produce a smooth flow of the fluid.This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit:
- STUDIES ON REACTIONS TO STIMULI IN UNICELLULAR ORGANISMS. II.—THE MECHANISM OF THE MOTOR REACTIONS OF PARAMECIUMAmerican Journal of Physiology-Legacy Content, 1899