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Propriospinal tracts

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Propriospinal tracts are three tracts, collections of nerve fibers ascending, descending, crossed and uncrossed, that interconnect various levels of the spinal cord. They are located in the white columns (funiculi) of the spinal cord where the columns meet the spinal central gray. Shorter fibers are located closer and longer fibers farther from the gray. The tracts include the ventral propriospinal tract, the lateral propriospinal tract and the dorsal propriospinal tract.[1] Some authors include the semilunar tract in this category.[2] A few other fibers intrinsic to the cord run in the dorsolateral fasciculus of the spinal cord and the septomarginal tract.[3]

References

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  1. ^ Carpenter MB; Sutin J (1983). Human Neuroanatomy. Baltimore: Williams and Wilkins Co. OCLC 8346573.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ Jastrow H (2007). Histologischer Atlas im Internet http://www.uni-mainz.de/FB/Medizin/Anatomie/workshop/Histology/RM.html
  3. ^ Schoenen J, Grant G (2004). "8:Spinal Cord: Connections". In Paxinos G, Mai JK (eds.). The Human Nervous System (2nd ed.). Amsterdam: Elsevier. OCLC 54767534.
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