scholarly journals XIV.—On the Relation of Nerves to Odontoblasts, and on the Growth of Dentine

1892 ◽  
Vol 36 (2) ◽  
pp. 321-333 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. G. Aitchison Robertson

Clinical and pathological observation both show that the dentine of the tooth is very closely connected with the nervous system, and is in consequence highly sensitive. Upon what structures does the sensibility of the dentine depend? In what manner is the dentine connected with the nerves of the pulp so as to become so sensitive to external stimuli?Perhaps there is no other structure in the body which is so largely supplied with nerves as the pulp of the tooth; even in the smallest fragment we find many nerve fibres. If we take the pulp from the incisor tooth of an ox and examine it after having allowed it to lie in a solution of osmic acid for a few minutes, we can see clearly through the darkened semi-transparent tissue a large blackened nerve trunk passing up the centre of the pulp, giving off on its way innumerable lateral branches, and dividing in a brush-like manner near the upper part of the pulp. All the fine branches are directed towards the periphery of the pulp. In longitudinal sections of the pulp we can see the same in greater detail; many large bundles of medullated and non-medullated nerve fibres running longitudinally near the centre and giving off lateral branches, which are found in great numbers near the periphery and divide into single nerve fibres just under the odontoblastic layer, being specially numerous at the apex of the pulp.

1946 ◽  
Vol 23 (2) ◽  
pp. 121-132
Author(s):  
J. GRAY ◽  
H. W. LISSMANN

1. An examination of a large number of toads has confirmed the conclusion that unilateral integrity of the sensory and motor nerve supply to one segment is necessary for the maintenance of the normal diagonal pattern of ambulation. The site of the intact segment is immaterial; segments of the body are equally effective as those of a limb provided the number of sensory nerve fibres is approximately the same. 2. If three limbs and the body are de-afferentated, a stimulus applied to the fourth intact limb can evoke well co-ordinated ambulation in all four limbs. If the motor roots of the fourth limb are cut, a stimulus applied to this limb invariably elicits only a monophasic response in each of the remaining three limbs. The nature of the monophasic response is always such as tends to move the body away from the source of stimulation. 3. A central nervous system totally isolated from stimulation of proprioceptor or labyrinthine origin cannot sustain co-ordinated movements of a toad either on land or in water.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dong Li ◽  
Li Na Hu ◽  
Ting La ◽  
Li Yuan Wei ◽  
Xiao Jun Zhang ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Active crosstalk between the nervous system and breast cancer cells as well as other cell types within the tumour microenvironment has been experimentally demonstrated in vitro and in animal models. However, low frequencies of peripheral nerve presence in human breast cancers reported in previous studies (~30% of cases) potentially negate a major role of the nervous system in breast cancer development and progression. This study aimed to better define the incidence of nerves within human breast cancers and to delineate associations with clinicopathological features.Methods: Immunohistochemical staining was conducted in formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded breast cancer tissue sections using antibodies against the pan-neuronal markers protein gene product 9.5 (PGP9.5) and growth-associated protein 43 (GAP-43), and the sympathetic nerve-specific marker tyrosine hydroxylase (TH). Nerve trunks (comprised of many nerve fibres/axons) and isolated nerve fibres (positively stained cells with or without typical morphology of axons outside definable nerve trunks) were quantitated. The chi-squared test was used to determine the associations between nerve trunk or isolated nerve fibre counts and clinicopathological parameters. The Log-rank test was used to compare differences in patient progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS). A multivariate analysis was performed according to the Cox Proportional Hazards Model to assess independent prognostic factors.Results: Nerve trunks and isolated nerve fibres were detected in 75% and 77% of breast cancers, respectively. The overall frequency of peripheral nerves in breast cancers was 85%, a markedly higher proportion than reported previously. Of note, most nerves present in breast cancers were of the sympathetic origin (positive for TH). While high density of nerve trunks or isolated nerve fibres was associated with poor PFS and OS of patients, high nerve trunk density appeared also to predict poor patient PFS independently of lymph node metastasis. Conclusions: Innervation of breast cancers is a common event correlated with poor patient outcomes. These findings support the notion that the nervous system plays an active role in breast cancer pathogenesis.


Parasitology ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 109 (2) ◽  
pp. 233-241 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. J. A. Brownlee ◽  
I. Fairweather ◽  
C. F. Johnston ◽  
M. T. Rogan

SUMMARYThe localization and distribution of the serotoninergic components of the nervous system in the hydatid organism, Echinococcus granulosus, were determined by immunocytochemical techniques in conjunction with confocal scanning laser microscopy (CSLM). The distribution of serotonin immunoreactivity (IR) paralleled that previously described for cholinesterase activity, although it was more widespread. Nerve cell bodies and nerve fibres immunoreactive for 5-HT were present throughout the central nervous system (CNS), occurring in the paired lateral, posterior lateral and rostellar ganglia, their connecting commissures and nerve rings in the scolex and in the ten longitudinal nerve cords that run posteriorly throughout the body of the worm. A large population of nerve cell bodies was associated with the lateral nerve cords. In the peripheral nervous system (PNS), immunoreactive nerve fibres occurred in well-developed nerve plexuses innervating the somatic musculature and the musculature of the rostellum and suckers. The genital atrium and associated reproductive ducts were richly innervated with serotoninergic nerve cell bodies and nerve fibres.


The fact that there are two very large nerve cells in the central nervous system of the squid, Loligo , was discovered by Williams (1909), who also gave a brief description of their connexions. His account appears never to have been amplified, or indeed even mentioned, by any subsequent worker until these enormous nerve fibres were accidentally rediscovered in 1933 (see Young 1935 a , 1936 a, b, c ). Williams considered that the whole giant-fibre system on each side of the body consists of the processes of one of the two main giant cells. In fact the arrangement is much more complicated than this, and contains two curiously opposite features of the greatest interest for the neurologist (Young 1936 £). First, the processes of the two main giant cells provide a clear case of the complete fusion of the axons of two nerve cells, thus infringing the strict canon of the neuron theory. Nevertheless, and this is the second point, there are also present, elsewhere in the system, discontinuous synapses which are perhaps more clear and easy to study than any yet described.


1945 ◽  
Vol s2-86 (341) ◽  
pp. 55-111
Author(s):  
THEODORE HOLMES BULLOCK

1. Results of a detailed study of the nervous system of Saccoglossus pusillus, with comparative material of about two dozen other species of Enteropneusta, are presented. 2. The primary feature of the enteropneust nervous system is its position within the superficial epithelium. Pertinent relations with non-nervous elements of the epithelium are described. The indifferent, ciliated cells elaborate supporting fibres in those regions where the epithelium is well developed and nervous tissue is concentrated. Such cells are considered to represent neuroglia in its most primitive form. The fibres appear in places to be continuous with the ciliary rootlet cones. 3. Nerve-cells are distributed diffusely in all the epithelia of the body, with certain exceptions such as the intestine, gills, coelomoducts, and the non-glandular areas of the abdomen of some forms. Both sensory and connecting and possibly also motor neurons occur here; but the sensory cells greatly predominate, often outnumbering all other epithelial cell-types combined. However, but one morphologic type of sensory cell--a true primary sense-cell--and no sense organs seem to be present. The thesis of Hanström is borne out that the low order of complexity of the nervous system as a whole is correlated with a low order of development of sensory structures. This in turn is correlated with a sluggish bottom living habit of life. 4. The nervous tissue is shown to be conspicuously undifferentiated. All nerve-cell processes are alike and resemble the most primitive nerve-fibres. A single exception is formed by the giant nerve-cell fibres, of which a few dozen exist in the nerve-cords. The absence of strata, tracts, and special neuropile-like regions as well as of elaborate nerve endings, ganglia, nerves, and ‘nuclei’, is impressive. Following the neurologic principle that complexity of function is reflected in complexity of structure, this is taken to mean a low degree of functional specialization. 5. Indications of several kinds agree in suggesting that the relations between neurons are something other than proto plasmic continuity. In the sense that nerve-fibres from different neurons are discontinuous the enteropneust nervous system is tentatively to be regarded as synaptic. Experimentally, however, the plexus has been shown to function as a nerve-net. It is proposed that such physiologic behaviour be taken to indicate a net in the sense of diffuse conduction, but that it does not predicate anatomical continuity of the fibres of the net. Such a picture requires the assumption of unpolarized synapses and the facts derived from the present organisms are taken to be evidence for this assumption. 6. Other primitive characters are described. The synapses are unlocalized, being scattered throughout the plexus. No special structural modifications have been developed at the synaptic endings. Connexions with the interior across the limiting membrane, heretofore unknown, are astonishingly difficult to demonstrate, but they must be assumed to exist and evidence is accumulated that they are diffuse. The widely scattered sense-cells, synapses, ganglion cells, and connexions with the interior are correlated with, and account for, the experimentally demonstrated autonomy of small pieces of the body-wall. 7. The general plexus is locally thickened and modified (1) in the cords of the mid-dorsal and mid-ventral lines of the trunk, (2) circularly around the junction of the collar and trunk, (3) through the dorsal collar coelom as an internal, primitively hollow, medullary strand, and (4) on the dorsal side of the peduncle. These are primarily conduction paths and are only secondarily important as ganglionic or modifying regions. The ventral cord in the trunk is shown to be larger and more important than the dorsal. In the sense of an organ which is involved in all reflexes, which contains all the intermediate neurons, and to which pass all sensory nerve-fibres, the balanoglossid has no central nervous system. 8. Internal to the limiting membrane no concentrations of nervous tissue are known with certainty to occur. No nerves, ganglia, or layers have been developed. As yet inadequately demonstrated, the internal nervous sytem can at most be only a sparse and diffuse system of cells and fibres communicating across the limiting membrane with the superficial plexus, at the least nothing but motor axons passing from cell-bodies in the integument inwards to the muscles. 9. The histologic evidence supports the previously demonstrated physiologic picture placing the Hemichordata in respect to the level of complexity of the nervous system below all other groups of animals with nervous systems except the coelenterates and ctenophores. No evidence is adduced that this primitiveness is secondary rather than original. In numerous histologic respects the enteropneust nervous system resembles that of Echinodermata and Phoronidea, but is simpler than either. 10. The chordate affinities of the balanoglossids are here accepted. But the strength of the argument from the nervous system is considered to have been overdrawn. No aspect of the general picture of primitiveness now demonstrated is, however, considered to argue against these affinities.


The electrical phenomena characteristic of nervous function have always served to attract attention to the distribution of electrolytes within nerve-fibres. The complexity of this distribution has been realised since the early observations of Du Bois Reymond, who first clearly defined the necessity of making all available information of this kind the basis from which to discuss the electrical phenomena elicited from nerves. An important hindrance to the acquisition of the necessary detail is offered by the extreme minuteness of the individual nerve-fibre. Most of the information already acquired has therefore of necessity been indirectly obtained, and can in general be described as a series of deductions drawn from a detailed observation of peculiarities in the conductivity of the nerve-trunk-a structure containing some thousands of nerve-fibres arranged in a complex of ensheathing tissues. It has been found that the conductivity of the nerve-trunk cannot be expressed as that of a simple homogeneous conductor, and can only be imitated by an arrangement of at least three kinds of conducting material in a definite pattern-an external medium of poor conductivity material in a definite pattern-an external medium of poor conductivity, a dividing membrane, and an internal solution of a conductivity of a higher order than that of the external solution. With good reason the properties of these three hypothetical tissues have usually been transferred to the structures of the individual nerve-fibre. For example, it has been frequently supposed that its axis-cylinder represented the internal solution of more than usual conductivity. Within recent years evidence has been gradually collected pointing to the fact that the major part of the conductivity of the tissues of the body, nerve included, is due to the inorganic salts they contain. It is therefore a fair assumption that here, where the internal solution of the nerve has been credited with an unusually concentration of inorganic salts within the nerve-fibre. Unfortunately, this statement cannot be adequately tested by an appeal to the "ash" of the nerve-trunk, since the axis-cylinders of the nerve-fibres form only a small proportion of the total bulk thus examined. The only fact gleaned from such as examination is that the salts present are very largely salts of potassium. Summing up all this indirectly-obtained evidence, it might therefore be said that there was reason to believe that a solution of potassium salts of more than usual concentration was present in the interior of individual nerve-fibres.


Author(s):  
Wiktor Djaczenko ◽  
Carmen Calenda Cimmino

The simplicity of the developing nervous system of oligochaetes makes of it an excellent model for the study of the relationships between glia and neurons. In the present communication we describe the relationships between glia and neurons in the early periods of post-embryonic development in some species of oligochaetes.Tubifex tubifex (Mull. ) and Octolasium complanatum (Dugès) specimens starting from 0. 3 mm of body length were collected from laboratory cultures divided into three groups each group fixed separately by one of the following methods: (a) 4% glutaraldehyde and 1% acrolein fixation followed by osmium tetroxide, (b) TAPO technique, (c) ruthenium red method.Our observations concern the early period of the postembryonic development of the nervous system in oligochaetes. During this period neurons occupy fixed positions in the body the only observable change being the increase in volume of their perikaryons. Perikaryons of glial cells were located at some distance from neurons. Long cytoplasmic processes of glial cells tended to approach the neurons. The superimposed contours of glial cell processes designed from electron micrographs, taken at the same magnification, typical for five successive growth stages of the nervous system of Octolasium complanatum are shown in Fig. 1. Neuron is designed symbolically to facilitate the understanding of the kinetics of the growth process.


Author(s):  
Venita F. Allison ◽  
J. E. Ubelaker ◽  
J. H. Martin

It has been suggested that parasitism results in a reduction of sensory structures which concomitantly reflects a reduction in the complexity of the nervous system. The present study tests this hypothesis by examining the fine morphology and the distribution of sensory receptors for two species of aspidogastrid trematodes by transmission and scanning electron microscopy. The species chosen are an ectoparasite, Cotylaspis insignis and an endoparasite, Aspidogaster conchicola.Aspidogaster conchicola and Cotylaspis insignis were obtained from natural infections of clams, Anodonta corpulenta and Proptera purpurata. The specimens were fixed for transmission electron microscopy in phosphate buffered paraformaldehyde followed by osmic acid in the same buffer, dehydrated in an ascending series of ethanol solutions and embedded in Epon 812.


Author(s):  
F. L. Azizova ◽  
U. A. Boltaboev

The features of production factors established at the main workplaces of shoe production are considered. The materials on the results of the study of the functional state of the central nervous system of women workers of shoe production in the dynamics of the working day are presented. The level of functional state of the central nervous system was determined by the speed of visual and auditory-motor reactions, installed using the universal device chronoreflexometer. It was revealed that in the body of workers of shoe production there is an early development of inhibitory processes in the central nervous system, which is expressed in an increase in the number of errors when performing tasks on proofreading tables. It was found that the most pronounced shift s in auditory-motor responses were observed in professional groups, where higher levels of noise were registered in the workplace. The correlation analysis showed a close direct relationship between the growth of mistakes made in the market and the decrease in production. An increase in the time spent on the task indicates the occurrence and growth of production fatigue.Funding. The study had no funding.Conflict of interests. The authors declare no conflict of interests.


Author(s):  
Natalya L. Yakimova ◽  
Vladimir A. Pankov ◽  
Aleksandr V. Lizarev ◽  
Viktor S. Rukavishnikov ◽  
Marina V. Kuleshova ◽  
...  

Introduction. Vibration disease continues to occupy one of the leading places in the structure of professional pathology. In workers after the termination of contact with vibration generalization and progression of violations in an organism is noted. The pathogenetic mechanisms of the progredient course of disturbances in the nervous system in the post-contact period of vibration exposure remain insufficiently studied.The aim of the study was to test an experimental model of vibration exposure to assess the neurophysiological and morphological effects of vibration in rats in the dynamics of the post-contact period.Materials and methods. The work was performed on 168 white male outbred rats aged 3 months weighing 180–260 g. The vibration effect was carried out on a 40 Hz vibrating table for 60 days 5 times a week for 4 hours a day. Examination of animals was performed after the end of the physical factor, on the 30th, 60th and 120th day of the post-contact period. To assess the long-term neurophysiological and morphofunctional effects of vibration in rats, we used indicators of behavioral reactions, bioelectric activity of the somatosensory zone of the cerebral cortex, somatosensory and visual evoked potentials, parameters of muscle response, morphological parameters of nervous tissue.Results. In the dynamics of the post-contact period observed the preservation of violations of tentatively research, motor and emotional components of behavior. In the Central nervous system instability of activity of rhythms of an electroencephalogram, decrease in amplitude of visual evoked potentials, lengthening of latency of somatosensory evoked potentials, decrease in total number of normal neurons and astroglia is established. In the peripheral nervous system remained changes in indicators: increasing duration and latency, reducing the amplitude of the neuromuscular response.Conclusions: The experimental model allows us to study the long-term neurophysiological and morphological effects of vibration on the body. The formation and preservation of changes in behavioral activity, neurophysiological and morphological effects of vibration from the 30th to the 120th day of the post-contact period were confirmed.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document