The effects of unilateral cortical and tectal lesions on retinal ganglion cells in rats
โ Scribed by V. H. Perry; A. Cowey
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag
- Year
- 1979
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 923 KB
- Volume
- 35
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0014-4819
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โฆ Synopsis
The ganglion cell layer of the retina was examined for retrograde transneuronal degeneration after removing the striate cortex unilaterally in infant or adult rats. No significant degeneration occurred, even after a survival time of 15 months, and the rat is therefore unlike other mammals in which the phenomenon has been studied. A possible explanation that most optic axons bifurcate in rats and that the tectal branch can sustain the ganglion cell after the branch to the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus has degenerated following removal of striate cortex was ruled out by the demonstration that combined unilateral removal of striate cortex and superior colliculus in adults was similarly ineffective. Unilateral removal of the superior colliculus alone also failed to affect ganglion cells of adult rats but produced conspicuous degeneration in infants. The greater vulnerability of the infantile developing visual system casts doubt on the common assumption that the effects of brain damage are less severe in infants than adults.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
The objective of the present investigation was to answer the following question: Does the visual cortex affect the neuronal firing of retinal ganglion cells in the rat? To test this hypothesis, the visual cortex was inactivated by a reversible cryoblockade. Action potentials of a ganglion cell were
The number of ipsilaterally projecting retinal ganglion cells (IPRGCs) in developing normal rats and rats which received unilateral thalamic lesion and monocular enucleation at birth was studied using wheat germ agglutinin conjugated to horseradish peroxidase (WGA-HRP) as a retrograde neuronal marke