Neuroanatomical Tract-Tracing Methods 2: Recent Progress
β Scribed by Enrico Mugnaini (auth.), Lennart Heimer, LΓ‘szlΓ³ ZΓ‘borszky (eds.)
- Publisher
- Springer US
- Year
- 1989
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 428
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-xv
Tract Tracing for the 1990s....Pages 1-4
Use of Retrograde Fluorescent Tracers in Combination with Immunohistochemical Methods....Pages 5-18
The PHA-L Anterograde Axonal Tracing Method....Pages 19-47
Combinations of Tracer Techniques, Especially HRP and PHA-L, with Transmitter Identification for Correlated Light and Electron Microscopic Studies....Pages 49-96
Interchangeable Uses of Autoradiographic and Peroxidase Markers for Electron Microscopic Detection of Neuronal Pathways and Transmitter-Related Antigens in Single Sections....Pages 97-127
Electron Microscopic Preembedding Double-Immunostaining Methods....Pages 129-172
Intracellular Labeling and Immunocytochemistry....Pages 173-199
Synaptic Relationships of Golgi-Impregnated Neurons as Identified by Electrophysiological or Immunocytochemical Techniques....Pages 201-238
Immunocytochemistry and Synaptic Relationships of Physiologically Characterized HRP-Filled Neurons....Pages 239-264
In Situ Hybridization Combined with Retrograde Fluorescent Tract Tracing....Pages 265-297
Microdissection in Combination with Biochemical Microassays as a Tool in Tract Tracing....Pages 299-310
Receptor Autoradiography....Pages 311-330
Processing and Analysis of Neuroanatomical Images....Pages 331-390
Back Matter....Pages 391-408
β¦ Subjects
Neurosciences
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p><span>The first two editions of this title had a tremendous impact in neuroscience. Between the Second edition in 1989 and today, there has been an explosion of information in the field, including advances in molecular techniques, such as genomics and proteomics, which have become increasing impo
<p><P>"The content of the book also serves to emphasize that neuroanatomy is, perhaps more than ever, a thriving and important part of the neurosciences...Most contributions have in common the combination of modern tract-tracing methods with other means of characterizing neural tissue, and thus the
Animals are all around us. While we may not often see them, we can see signs that they've been there. Some signs might be simple footprints in snow or mud (tracks) and other signs include chewed or scratched bark, homes or even poop and pee (traces). Children will become animal detectives after lear