Abstract

The distribution of somatostatin-immunoreactive structures in the infant brainstem was investigated using the peroxidase-antiperoxidase technique. A wide distribution of somatostatin-immunoreactive cell bodies and fibers was observed throughout the brainstem. Numerous somatostatin-immunoreactive cell bodies and fibers were present in several areas of the brainstem including the substantia grisea centralis and the reticular formation. Some immunoreactive cell bodies were seen in cranial nerve nuclei such as the nucleus praepositus, the nucleus nervi hypoglossi and the vestibular nuclei. Immunoreactive fibers were seen in the nucleus cuneatus, the locus coeruleus, the nucleus tractus solitarius, the nucleus ambiguus, the nucleus tractus spinalis nervi trigemini and the dorsal horn of the spinal cord. These data were in agreement with previous works on the human adult. However, a high density of somatostatin-immunoreactive cell bodies and fibers in the interpeduncular nucleus and in the nucleus centralis superior, and a dense network of somatostatin-immunoreactive fibers in the dorsal part of the nucleus inferior olivarius, were also observed. The role of somatostatin in some brainstem nuclei and its probable implication in some specific neuropathological diseases of the infant brainstem is discussed.

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