Temporal and spatial sequence of anterograde degeneration in the cochlear nerve fibers of the cat. A light microscopic study

Autor: Kirsten Kjelsberg Osen, Enrico Mugnaini, Atle Rønning Arnesen
Rok vydání: 1978
Předmět:
Zdroj: The Journal of Comparative Neurology. 178:679-696
ISSN: 1096-9861
0021-9967
DOI: 10.1002/cne.901780406
Popis: This study deals with anterograde degeneration in the cochlear nerve fibers following cochlear lesions. The observations are based on 2-mum thick sections of material embedded in resin according to procedures used in electron microscopy and stained with toluidine blue. Among the various operative approaches used in this study, sparing of the modiolus afforded the least local reaction and furnished the material best suited for anterograde degneration studies in this nerve only 2 mm long. The anterograde degeneration of the cochlear nerve is characterized by segmental swelling of myelinated nerve fibers followed by shrinkage of the axoplasm and collapse of the distended myelin sheaths. The swelling, which begins at the nodal-paranodal region of the axon, is preceded by accumulation in the cytoplasm of granular organelles, presumably mitochondria and lysosomes. The portions of the cochlear fibers situated in the nerve root, i.e., within the cochlear nuclei and including the axon terminals, follow essentially the same pattern of degeneration as those in the peripheral portion of the nerve. Both peripherally and centrally degenerative changes occur first in the basal, high frequency fibers and centrally degenerative changes occur first in the basal, high frequency fibers and progress to the apical, low frequency fibers. The difference between the two extremes in the onset of degeneration is, approximately, 24 hours. Once initiated, however, the pace of degeneration is the same along the whole fiber spectrum.
Databáze: OpenAIRE