During the time spent by the writer as a guest of The Wistar Institute, Philadelphia, in 1928, Dr. Helen Dean King very generously placed at his disposal a number of animals from her strain of inbred albino rats. This strain
The vascular supply of the archicortex of the rat. II. The albino rat at birth
β Scribed by E. Horne Craigie
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1931
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 259 KB
- Volume
- 52
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-9967
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
A recent paper by Pujiula ('27) emphasizes the importance of the olfactory sense to the rat immediately after birth and seeks to establish a relation between this fact and a relatively advanced stage of development in the olfactory epithelium in the fetus at about term. I n view of these
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Continuing the studies of the vascularity of the archicortex, the first of which appeared recently (Craigie, '30), measurements of the capillary richness in this region have now been made in the wild Norway rat. This at the same time introduces another group of investigations, it being intended to e
## Abstract The average of neuron counts made in five rat inferior olives was 24,400 neurons per olive, i.e., 48,800 per rat, β 6.8 times fewer than the number of rat cerebellar Purkinje cells. The medial accessory olive was larger, both in terms of volume and cell numbers, than either the dorsal a
The volnmc of the parathyroid glands was studied both to contribute to the knowledge of the anatomy of the rat and to furnish a criterion of size for experimental studies. As far as could he d rmiiied from available literature the only qimilar stnclies made previoasly were those by Jackson ( 'IS), O