Spinal trigeminal nucleus

Spinal trigeminal nucleus

The cranial nerve nuclei schematically represented; dorsal view. Motor nuclei in red; sensory in blue. (Trigeminal nerve nuclei are at "V".)

Horizontal section through the lower part of the pons showing the spinal trigeminal nucleus (#11).
Details
Identifiers
Latin nucleus spinalis nervi trigemini
MeSH A08.186.211.132.931.920
NeuroNames ancil-1015266456
TA A14.1.04.211
A14.1.05.404
FMA 54565

Anatomical terms of neuroanatomy

The spinal trigeminal nucleus is a nucleus in the medulla that receives information about deep/crude touch, pain, and temperature from the ipsilateral face. In addition to the trigeminal nerve (CN V), the facial (CN VII), glossopharyngeal (CN IX), and vagus nerves (CN X) also convey pain information from their areas to the spinal trigeminal nucleus.[1] Thus the spinal trigeminal nucleus receives input from cranial nerves V, VII, IX, and X.

The spinal nucleus is composed of three subnuclei: subnucleus oralis (pars oralis), subnucleus caudalis (pars caudalis), and subnucleus interpolaris (pars interpolaris). The subnucleus oralis is associated with the transmission of discriminative (fine) tactile sense from the orofacial region. The subnucleus interpolaris is also associated with the transmission of tactile sense, as well as dental pain, whereas the subnucleus caudalis is associated with the transmission of nociception and thermal sensations from the head.

This region is also denoted at sp5 in other neuroanatomical nomenclature.[2]

This nucleus projects to the ventral posterior medial nucleus in the dorsal thalamus. In mice, this thalamic nucleus has significant amounts of expression of leptin receptors, NPY and GLP-1.[3]

See also

References

  1. Brainstem Nuclei
  2. George Paxinos (2004). The Mouse Brain in Stereotaxic Coordinates. Gulf Professional Publishing. ISBN 978-0-12-547640-9. Retrieved 16 August 2013.
  3. Mercer, Julian G, Moar, Kim M, Findlay, Patricia A, Hoggard, Nigel, Adam, Clare L (1998). "Association of leptin receptor (OB-Rb), NPY and GLP-1 gene expression in the ovine and murine brainstem". Regulatory peptides. Elsevier. 75: 271–278.


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