front matter 1

(Michael S) #1
in Figs. 9-25 through 9-31 in Altman and Bayer, 2001).
The lateral corticospinal tract and Lissauer’s tract contain
very sparse reactive glia. The dorsal root bifurcation zone
is a complex area that not only contains heavily myelinated
fi bers, but also unmyelinated fi bers. The heavily myelin-
ated axons are presumably from large sensory neurons in
the dorsal root ganglia, while the unmyelinated axons are
from small nociceptive ganglion cells. The remaining fi ber
tracts contain varying densities of reactive glia (see column
3 in Table IV A-1). In the cell body stained sections, there
is a different density of proliferating glia in various fi ber
tracts. It is lowest in the lateral and ventral corticospinal
tracts and highest in the dorsal funiculus (except Lissauer’s
tract) and spinocerebellar tracts (see column 4 in Table IV
A-1).

In the cell body stained sections, columns of moto-
neurons continue to be prominent and show greater degrees
of segregation in the ventral horn. The dorsal horn has
fairly well-defi ned clusters of small neurons in the substan-
tia gelatinosa. The accumulation of lateral horn motoneu-
rons is very obvious at the thoracic level. Clarke’s column
is also prominent in this specimen.

Plate 53 is a survey of matched myelin stained and

cell body stained sections from Y162-61, a specimen in the


Yakovlev Collection with a crown rump length of 270 mm


(see Chapter 6 in Altman and Bayer, 2001). All sections are


shown at the same scale. The boxes enclosing each section


list the approximate level and the total area (post-fi xation)


of the section in square millimeters (mm^2 ). Full-page


normal contrast photographs of each specimen are in


Plates 54A-61A. Low contrast photographs with superim-


posed labels and outlines of structural details are in Plates


54B-61B. In this specimen, the myelin stained and cell


body stained sections were preserved on separate large


glass plates without any numbers. Thirteen myelin stained


and 13 cell body stained sections were photographed rang-


ing from lower thoracic to sacral/coccygeal levels. There


were no sections preserved at cervical, upper thoracic,


and middle thoracic levels. The 26 photographic prints


were intuitively arranged in order from thoracic to sacral/


coccygeal levels, using internal features such as the dimin-


ishing size of the corticospinal tracts from rostral to caudal


levels, and the width of the ventral horn. Then, the myelin


stained and the cell body stained sections were matched.


As in the previous specimen, the cross-sectional

area of a myelin stained section is smaller than the match-


ing cell body stained section in all cases. Evidently, the


myelin staining procedure produces greater tissue shrink-


age than the cell body staining procedure. The lumbar


enlargement expands relative to regions above and below.


Using the myelin-stained section areas for comparison, the


lumbar enlargement is 90% larger than the lower thoracic


level, 41% larger than the upper lumbar level, and 278%


larger than the sacral/coccygeal level.


Myelination in this specimen is more advanced than

in the previous specimen, even though the two are only


5 weeks apart, and we are dealing with a more immature


(caudal) region of the spinal cord. Dense staining indica-


tive of true myelination is seen in the ventral commissure,


the ventral rootlets, the dorsal root bifurcation zone, the


dorsal root collateralization zone, and deep regions of the


fasciculus gracilis (see column 2 in Table IV A-1). Myelin-


ated fi bers from the dorsal root collateralization zone pen-


etrate the gray matter, and there is a light dusting of reactive


glia in the subgelatinosal plexus in the dorsal gray as fi ner


collateral axons prepare for later myelination (see Fig. 6-39


in Altman and Bayer, 2001). Clumps of myelinated axons


are in the lateral part of the intermediate gray and the lateral


neck region of the dorsal gray (the reticulated area, labeled


IV. The Third Trimester


in the spinal cord of a GW31 fetus -------------------------------------------- A. Matched myelin and cell body stained sections


Name

Myelination

Reactive glia

Proliferating glia

DORSAL FUNICULUS:

LATERAL and VENTRAL
FUNICULI:

dorsal root col. zone Many fibers --- Very dense
deep fas. gracilis Many fibers --- Very dense
superficial fas. gracilis Some fibers Dense Dense

lat. reticulospinal tract Some fibers Dense Sparse
intraspinal tracts Some fibers Dense Sparse
spinocephalic tracts

rubrospinal tract

Some fibers Dense Sparse

spinocerebellar tracts Some fibers Dense Dense

Some fibers Dense Sparse

vestibulospinal tract Some fibers Dense Sparse

dorsal root bif. zone Many fibers* --- Sparse

ven. commissure Many fibers --- Sparse

Lissauer's tract --- None Very sparse

lat. cortricospinal tract --- Very sparseVery sparse
ven. cortricospinal tract --- Sparse Very sparse

Table IV A-1: Glia types and concentration


in the white matter at GW31


* intermingled in a bed of nonreactive glia (associated with
Lissauer's tract fibers?)
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