. Medical diagnosis for the student and practitioner. ross the cord through the anteriorcommissure to the opposite antero-lateral ascending tract, and through themedulla and pons to the optic thalamus where another cell receives and by itsneuraxon transmits it to the cortex. Decussation. Crossed tract. Direct tract. Motor n88 MEDICAL DIAGNOSIS tract. Tiffs* Golls tract. THE INDIRECT SENSORY TRACT.—This conveys stimuli frommuscles, joints and the viscera through the posterior root ganglia and thencealong the sensory roots to the cord where a part enters directly, and
. Medical diagnosis for the student and practitioner. ross the cord through the anteriorcommissure to the opposite antero-lateral ascending tract, and through themedulla and pons to the optic thalamus where another cell receives and by itsneuraxon transmits it to the cortex. Decussation. Crossed tract. Direct tract. Motor n88 MEDICAL DIAGNOSIS tract. Tiffs* Golls tract. THE INDIRECT SENSORY TRACT.—This conveys stimuli frommuscles, joints and the viscera through the posterior root ganglia and thencealong the sensory roots to the cord where a part enters directly, and ascendsin the posterior column of the cord of the same side as far as the nuclei ofthe columns of Burdach and Goll {nucleus cuneatus and nucleus gracilis)in the medulla, from which centers the neuraxons (internal arcuate fibers)cross in the sensory decussation. Some go thence to the cerebellar cortex,whence they are transmitted by cells of that area through the superior cere-bellar peduncles to the optic thalamus and red nuclei, and thence by yet.
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, booksubjectdiagnos, bookyear1922