Results 271 to 280 of about 67,163 (300)
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Lateral Geniculate Nucleus

1985
The lateral geniculate nucleus is remarkably stable across mammals and can be recognized even in those such as moles in which the eyes are congenitally absent or greatly reduced in size. It is stricly a nuclear complex, rather than a single nucleus, for in virtually every mammal two or more components can be recognized. One of these, the dorsal lateral
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Geniculate Body, Lateral

1988
The geniculate bodies are nuclear masses belonging to the dorsal thalamus that have detached from it during ontogeny and are therefore designated as the metathalamus. They comprise two major structures: the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) related to the visual system, and the medial geniculate nucleus, a part of the auditory system.
Pedro Pasik, Tauba Pasik
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Geniculate Neuralgia

2019
Geniculate neuralgia is a rare syndrome of episodic, lancinating pain located within the ear canal. There may be a trigger point within the canal and associated with disorders of tearing, taste, and salivation. It is important to distinguish geniculate neuralgia from other causes of inner ear pain, including structural lesions and glossopharyngeal or ...
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Geniculate Ganglion Facial Palsy

Archives of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery, 1965
EVER since Ramsay Hunt's (1907)2description of the syndrome of facial palsy, herpetic rash in and around the ear on the same side often accompanied by a constitutional disturbance and sometimes by deafness and giddiness, there has been a tendency to think of a lesion of the nerve trunk at or near the geniculate ganglion only when the Ramsay Hunt ...
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Binocular inhibition in the lateral geniculate body

Experimental Neurology, 1960
Abstract Afterpositivity elicited in the dorsal nucleus of the lateral geniculate body of cats by stimulation of either of the optic nerves was found to be closely associated with depression of the postsynaptic spike and afterpositivity elicited by a test stimulus to the other optic nerve.
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The Pharmacology of Thalamic and Geniculate Neurons

1971
Publisher Summary This chapter describes the pharmacology of thalamic and geniculate neurons. It discusses the progress that has been made in identifying transmitter agents in brain. The substances discussed are acetylcholine (ACh), monoamines, including dopamine, noradrenaline, and 5-hydroxytryptamine, and the neutral and acidic amino acids, such as
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The Medial Geniculate Complex

1985
The medial geniculate body is a complex of three major nuclei (Figs. 8.1–8.3): ventral or principal, medial or magnocellular, and dorsal or posterior. The ventral nucleus lies lateral to the brachium of the inferior colliculus as this traverses the complex.
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A case of geniculate herpes [PDF]

open access: possibleThe Irish Journal of Medical Science, 1938
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