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Title: Afferent influences on brain stem auditory nuclei of the chicken: neuron number and size following cochlea removal. Author: Born DE, Rubel EW. Journal: J Comp Neurol; 1985 Jan 22; 231(4):435-45. PubMed ID: 3968247. Abstract: The consequences of cochlea removal on neuron number and soma cross-sectional area were examined in the second order auditory nucleus (n. magnocellularis) of chickens. Both the age of the subjects at the time of cochlea (basilar papilla) removal (1-66 weeks) and the survival period (1-45 days) were varied. Neuron number and soma cross-sectional area were determined from Nissl stained sections. Additional material was processed to examine the relationship of ganglion cell loss to changes in n. magnocellularis. Neuron number decreased by 25-30% and soma cross-sectional area decreased by 10-20% ipsilateral to the cochlea removal in chickens operated on during the first 6 weeks after hatching. In contrast, in chickens operated on at 66 weeks posthatch neuron number decreased less than 10% and there was no change in soma area. The changes were rapid, being nearly complete 2 days after cochlea removal. An initial change (1 and 2 days after surgery) observed in animals operated on up to 6 weeks posthatch was the presence of a large number of neurons in which no Nissl substance could be detected. These results demonstrate an age-dependent change in the susceptibility of NM neurons to deafferentation. This change is not temporally related to other measures of functional maturation of the auditory system.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]