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Published in: Child's Nervous System 9/2014

01-09-2014 | Original Paper

The habenulo-interpeduncular and mammillothalamic tracts: early developed fiber tracts in the human fetal diencephalon

Authors: Kwang Ho Cho, Shigemi Mori, Hyung Suk Jang, Ji Hyun Kim, Hiroshi Abe, Jose Francisco Rodriguez-Vazquez, Gen Murakami

Published in: Child's Nervous System | Issue 9/2014

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Abstract

Purpose

The habenulo-interpeduncular (HI) and mammillothalamic (MT) tracts are phylogenetically ancient. The clinical relevance of these tracts has recently received attention. In this work, we map the anatomy the developing HI and MT.

Methods

To investigate the topographical anatomy of developing fiber tracts in and around the diencephalon, we examined the horizontal, frontal, and sagittal serial paraffin sections of 28 human fetuses at 8–12 weeks of gestation.

Results

In all specimens, eosinophilic early fiber bundles were limited to the bilateral HI and MT tracts in contrast to pale-colored later developing fibers such as the thalamocortical projections and optic tract. The HI and MT tracts ran nearly parallel and sandwiched the thalamus from the dorsal and ventral sides, respectively. The nerve tract course appeared to range from 5–7 mm for the HI tract and 3–5 mm for the MT tract in 15 specimens at 11–12 weeks. The HI tract was embedded in, adjacent to, or distant from the developing parvocellular red nucleus.

Conclusions

In early human fetuses, HI and MT tracts might be limited pathways for primitive cholinergic fiber connections between the ventral midbrain and epithalamic limbic system.
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Metadata
Title
The habenulo-interpeduncular and mammillothalamic tracts: early developed fiber tracts in the human fetal diencephalon
Authors
Kwang Ho Cho
Shigemi Mori
Hyung Suk Jang
Ji Hyun Kim
Hiroshi Abe
Jose Francisco Rodriguez-Vazquez
Gen Murakami
Publication date
01-09-2014
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
Child's Nervous System / Issue 9/2014
Print ISSN: 0256-7040
Electronic ISSN: 1433-0350
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00381-014-2432-5

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