Neuroscience

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Posts tagged Cajal

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Cajal’s histological preparations and drawings showing some contributions to glial cells. (A) Fibrous astrocyte in the white matter of adult brain (formalin-uranium nitrate and gold-sublimated chloride); (B) Protoplasmic astrocyte in an adult brain (silver carbonate (del Rio) and formalin-uranium nitrate); (C) Twin astrocytes in the human hippocampus (formalin-uranium nitrate); (D) Fibrous astrocytes from the white substance of adult brain (Golgi methods); (E) Olygodendrocytes (ammoniacal silver oxide and Nissl); (F) Microglia cells (ammoniacal silver oxide, reduced silver nitrate and silver carbonate (del Rio) methods).

Source: The Histological Slides and Drawings of Cajal

Cajal’s histological preparations and drawings showing some contributions to glial cells. (A) Fibrous astrocyte in the white matter of adult brain (formalin-uranium nitrate and gold-sublimated chloride); (B) Protoplasmic astrocyte in an adult brain (silver carbonate (del Rio) and formalin-uranium nitrate); (C) Twin astrocytes in the human hippocampus (formalin-uranium nitrate); (D) Fibrous astrocytes from the white substance of adult brain (Golgi methods); (E) Olygodendrocytes (ammoniacal silver oxide and Nissl); (F) Microglia cells (ammoniacal silver oxide, reduced silver nitrate and silver carbonate (del Rio) methods).

Source: The Histological Slides and Drawings of Cajal

Filed under science neuroscience brain psychology Cajal glial cells art drawings astrocytes hippocampus modern neuroscience histological preparations microglia cells

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More than 125 years ago, Santiago Ramón y Cajal was able to draft and prove the neuron doctrine, and later, to develop prophetic theories about neural function and plasticity, many of which have been proven by current neuroscience.It was chance that made Cajal, during his doctorate studies, have his first contact with histology and force him to study the then current theories about pathogenesis of inflammation.Thus, he gained knowledge of the vascular hypothesis, by Julius Cohnheim, a German pathologist who, opposing the opinion of his teacher and father of cellular pathology, Rudolf Virchow, made leukocytes the protagonists of inflammation, given their ability to develop ameboid movements directed by chemical signals. Cohnheim’s chemotactic theory deeply influenced Cajal’s conception of biology. So, the basic postulates of chemotaxis can be identified at different moments in Cajal’s research, from the description of the “growth cone” in embryonic neuroblasts, the origin of the neurotrophic theory, to the proposal of the pathophysiological mechanisms of neuronal plasticity.From Cajal’s point of view, the neurons move during their development and also adapt to different external circumstances. Chemical endogenous substances can stimulate this movement in a similar way to leukocytes during the process of inflammation.

Source: Neuroscience, Volume 217, Pages 1-5 (16 August 2012)

More than 125 years ago, Santiago Ramón y Cajal was able to draft and prove the neuron doctrine, and later, to develop prophetic theories about neural function and plasticity, many of which have been proven by current neuroscience.

It was chance that made Cajal, during his doctorate studies, have his first contact with histology and force him to study the then current theories about pathogenesis of inflammation.

Thus, he gained knowledge of the vascular hypothesis, by Julius Cohnheim, a German pathologist who, opposing the opinion of his teacher and father of cellular pathology, Rudolf Virchow, made leukocytes the protagonists of inflammation, given their ability to develop ameboid movements directed by chemical signals. Cohnheim’s chemotactic theory deeply influenced Cajal’s conception of biology. So, the basic postulates of chemotaxis can be identified at different moments in Cajal’s research, from the description of the “growth cone” in embryonic neuroblasts, the origin of the neurotrophic theory, to the proposal of the pathophysiological mechanisms of neuronal plasticity.

From Cajal’s point of view, the neurons move during their development and also adapt to different external circumstances. Chemical endogenous substances can stimulate this movement in a similar way to leukocytes during the process of inflammation.

Source: Neuroscience, Volume 217, Pages 1-5 (16 August 2012)

Filed under science neuroscience brain psychology modern neuroscience Cajal research neuron plasticity histology inflammation leukocytes biology

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