The Anatomy of the Central Nervous System of Man And of Vertebrates in General

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The first is the peculiar form of the posterior horn, which is (363) 364 ANATOMY OF THE CEXTKAL NERVOUS SYSTEM.
connected only by a thin "neck" with its dorsal extremity, here greatly thickened by substantia gelatinosa, forming the "head of the dorsal horn/' Through the substantia gelatinosa pass numerous fine fibrils, which are partly posterior root-fibers. Another portion of them comes from a greater distance, namely from the Gasserian ganglion. The cells of this ganglion emit peripherally th
...e nermis trigeminus, and centrally the trigeminal root. A part of these latter fibers turn downward, and from them pass continuously fine fibrils to the end-nucleus of the trigeminus: a column of gelatinous substance, which is demonstrable from the pons down to the substantia gelatinosa of the upper cervical cord. The crescentic trans- verse section of the tractus spinalis of the fifth nerve lies in the cervical cord in close Fig. 231. Cross-section of the oblongata through the pyramidal decussa- tion.

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