Anatomy of the inferior colliculus in rat
- 1 January 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Brain Structure and Function
- Vol. 171 (1) , 1-20
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00319050
Abstract
This paper defines the pattern of subdivision of the inferior colliculus in rat. It is based on serial sections of brains of albino and hooded rats cut in the frontal, sagittal and horizontal planes using Golgi, Nissl and a combined cell-myelin method. In rat, like in other mammals, the inferior colliculus consists of a central nucleus, an external cortex, and a dorsal cortex. The central nucleus is flattened in the frontal plane and confined to the caudomedial part of the inferior colliculus. It is characterized by a lamellar organization of disc-shaped neurons interspersed with multipolar cells. The cells are small to medium-sized. Although there is a dorsoventral gradient in size and packing density of cells within the nucleus, the overall size is smaller and the packing density larger than in adjacent subdivisions. The two cortices each consists of three layers. The outer-most layer is common to the two cortices, forming a fibro-cellular capsule continuous along most of the circumference of the inferior colliculus. The external cortex is located lateral, rostral, ventral and ventrocaudal to the central nucleus. Its second layer, deep to the superficial capsule, is characterized by clusters of many small and a few medium-sized neurons in a myelin-dense neuropil. Layer 3, which constitutes the major portion of the subdivision, consists of relatively scattered, small, medium and large cells, the most characteristic element being large multipolar neurons with coarse Nissl granules. The dorsal cortex is located dorsocaudal and dorsomedial to the central nucleus. Its second layer is composed of small neurons, while the third, deep layer in addition contains medium-sized neurons. The cell density is intermediate to that of the central nucleus and the deep part of the external cortex. We have tried to facilitate the parcellation by reference to easily recognizable, nearby structures and to standard stereotaxic coordinates.This publication has 56 references indexed in Scilit:
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