. A Reference handbook of the medical sciences : embracing the entire range of scientific and practical medicine and allied science. Fig. 3887.—Horizontal Section through Human Brain. (After Edinger.) and passing over the corp. geniculat. laterale into theoptic tract. Of the nucleus cinereus internns little need besaid ; it has no transverse markings, and iscontinuous with the central gray substanceand with the soft commissure, extendingonly a little beyond the latter anteriorly.*The histological character ofthe gray substance of the thala-mus deserves a passing under a high po


. A Reference handbook of the medical sciences : embracing the entire range of scientific and practical medicine and allied science. Fig. 3887.—Horizontal Section through Human Brain. (After Edinger.) and passing over the corp. geniculat. laterale into theoptic tract. Of the nucleus cinereus internns little need besaid ; it has no transverse markings, and iscontinuous with the central gray substanceand with the soft commissure, extendingonly a little beyond the latter anteriorly.*The histological character ofthe gray substance of the thala-mus deserves a passing under a high powerthe gray substance reveals aconsiderable number of large-sized, pigmented ganglion-cellsof the spindle-shaped or pyra-m i d a 1 order. The externalgeniculate body contains spin-dle-shaped cells lying in thedirection of the radiations ofthe optic tract (Mendel). With the preceding descrip-tion of the thalamus the anat-omy of this ganglion is by nomeans exhausted. We haveyet to consider the fibres con-necting the thalamus with thecortex and the periphery, re-spectively. A. Cortical Connecting JPibn s.—1. The stilus anteri


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjectmedicine, bookyear188