Red nucleus
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| Brain: Red nucleus | ||
|---|---|---|
| Transverse section through the midbrain showing the location of the red nuclei. The superior colliculi are at the top of image and the cerebral peduncles at the bottom of image – both in section. | ||
| [[Image:|250px|center|]] | ||
| Latin | nucleus ruber | |
| Gray's | subject #188 802 | |
| Part of | ||
| Components | ||
| Artery | ||
| Vein | ||
| BrainInfo/UW | hier-496 | |
| MeSH | A08.186.211.132.659.822.642 | |
- Main article: mesencephalon
The red nucleus is a structure in the rostral midbrain involved in motor coordination. It comprises a caudal magnocellular and a rostral parvocellular part.
Contents |
[edit] Function
In animals without a significant corticospinal tract, gait is mainly controlled by the red nucleus.
In humans, the red nucleus mainly controls the muscles of the shoulder and upper arm, but it has some control over the lower arm and hand as well. It is less important in its motor functions for humans than in many other mammals, because, in humans, the corticospinal tract is dominant. However the crawling of babies is controlled by the red nucleus, as is arm-swinging in normal walking. Since the red nucleus has sparse control over hands (as the Rubrospinal tract is more involved in large muscle movement such as that for Arms and Legs), fine control of the fingers is not modified by the functioning of the red nucleus (rather it relies on the corticospinal tract).
[edit] Input and output
The red nucleus receives many inputs from the contralateral cerebellum (interpositus nucleus and lateral cerebellar nucleus) and an input from the ipsilateral motor cortex.
It sends efferent axons (the rubrospinal projection) to the contralateral half of the rhombencephalic reticular formation and spinal cord. These efferent axons cross just ventral to the nucleus and descend through the midbrain to the spinal cord, where the rubrospinal tract which they make up runs ventral to the lateral corticospinal tract in the lateral funiculus. Second bundle of fibers continues ipsilaterally through the medial tegmental field towards inferior olive.
[edit] Meaning of name
Its name derives from an iron-containing pigment in many of the cells, which in fresh samples gives it a pink appearance.
[edit] See also
[edit] Additional images
Human brain frontal (coronal) section description 2.JPG
Human brain frontal (coronal) section |
[edit] External links
| This page uses content from the English-language version of Wikipedia. The original article was at Red nucleus. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with Psychology Wiki, the text of Wikipedia is available under the GNU Free Documentation License. |
