Abstract

The locations of 249 cell bodies of the ascending tract neurones in the grey matter of S1-S3 segments of the spinal cord were reconstructed by histochemical staining, after their axons (or axonal collaterals) at the level of the Thl3 segment were injected with horseradish peroxidase (HRP). In three cats in which the injections of HRP were restricted to the lateral part of the lateral funiculi (llf), about 84% of 159 retrogradely labelled cells were found on the contralateral side, while about 16% were located ipsilaterally. They were the most numerous in S2, S3 and S1 segments, respectively, and the neurones were distributed mainly in the lateral laminae I-VII, medial laminae V, VI and lamina VIII. In three other animals in which the injections of the marker were limited to the dorsal part of the lateral funiculi (dlf), 84 of the 90 ascending tract neurones were found to be distributed in the S2 and S3 segments both ipsi- (lateral laminae III-V) and contralaterally, (lateral laminae IV and V as well as the medial laminae VII and VIII) in similar numbers. The remaining six of the 90 cells with only contralateral projections at the dorsolateral funiculus at Thl3 were scattered within the S1 segment. These data are consistent with the results of studies on sacral spinocerebellar, spinothalamic and spinoreticular projections, as well as the localization of sacral spinocervical and priopriospinal neurones. They may also imply the importance of the bilateral fiber course of the neurones of origin of ascending tracts in the S2 and S3 segments within the dorsolateral funiculus.

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