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Title: Morphology of neurons in the basal forebrain nuclei of the rat: a Golgi study. Author: Dinopoulos A, Parnavelas JG, Uylings HB, Van Eden CG. Journal: J Comp Neurol; 1988 Jun 22; 272(4):461-74. PubMed ID: 3417896. Abstract: The neuronal cell types and their morphology in the nucleus basalis (NB), in the horizontal and vertical limbs of the diagonal band of Broca (NHL and NVL), and in the medial septal nucleus (MSN) were examined in Golgi-impregnated material. Cells appeared as multipolar or oligopolar and displayed a variable dendritic morphology; their somata varied considerably both in shape and size. The dendrites of most cells were restricted within nuclear boundaries, although occasionally neurons located near boundaries, particularly cells in NHL, extended dendritic arbors into neighboring areas. Axons were rarely seen, but when they were found they were generally not impregnated beyond the initial segment and displayed no apparent preferential direction. Three types of cells common to each of the 4 nuclear groups could be identified on the basis of soma shape and dendritic form. The first type included large multipolar neurons with triangular or polygonal perikarya and typically 3-5 dendrites emerging from the poles of each cell. These cells were especially numerous in NB, NHL, and NVL, but were much less frequent in MSN. The second type comprised medium-sized cells with round or oval somata and a small number, usually 2-3, of dendrites. They constituted a large percentage of the cell population in MSN, but were also encountered in NHL and NVL as well as in NB. The third type consisted of cells with fusiform or spindle-shaped somata with usually single dendrites emanating from each pole of the cell. A rare but distinct type of spindle-shaped neuron with dendrites bearing a rich complement of long and thin appendages was observed mainly in the ventral border of NHL. The present observations suggest that although the proportions and sizes of the 3 types of neurons vary between the 4 nuclei, neurons throughout the basal forebrain share common morphological characteristics.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]