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Comparative Study
. 1979 Oct 1;187(3):581-8.
doi: 10.1002/cne.901870308.

The longitudinal zonal pattern in the paramedian lobule of the cat's cerebellum: an analysis based on a correlation of recent HRP data with results of studies with other methods

Comparative Study

The longitudinal zonal pattern in the paramedian lobule of the cat's cerebellum: an analysis based on a correlation of recent HRP data with results of studies with other methods

F Walberg et al. J Comp Neurol. .

Abstract

In a preceding study of the distribution of retrogradely labeled cells in the inferior olive of the cat after microinjections of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) in the contralateral paramedian lobule (Brodal and Walberg, '77b), three longitudinal zones were distinguished. The zones were assumed to correspond to Voogd's zones C1, C2 and D, receiving their afferents from parts of the dorsal accessory olive, of the medial accessory olive and of the dorsal lamella of the principal olive, respectively. Labeled cells were not found in the ventral lamella of the principal olive, however, although there is no doubt that also this projects to the paramedian lobule. In the present study, iontophoretic ejections, covering the extreme lateral part of the paramedian lobule, gave rise to labeling of cells in the ventral lamella. It is concluded that the zone D in the paramedian lobule can be subdivided into two, a lateral, D2, and a medial, D1, receiving fibers from the ventral and dorsal lamella, respectively. Neither zone extends throughout the entire length of the paramedian lobule. Both are lacking most rostrally and most caudally. This and other findings prompted a renewed analysis of the entire pattern of zonal representation in the paramedian lobule, based on correlations of our observations with the HRP method with data obtained with other methods. The results of this analysis are briefly described and summarized in a diagram (fig. 3B). It is particularly remarkable that zone B is present in some folia medially. A somatotopical arrangement appears to be present within all zones. A full account and documentation will be presented separately (Brodal and Kawamura, '80).

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