Morphological Investigation of the Brain of the African Ostrich (Struthio camelus)

The aim of the current study focused on the morphological features of the brain of the African ostrich. The brain was studied macroscopically, microscopically and the measurements of all brain parts were demonstrated. The brain of ostrich was rhombus in shape with large obtuse triangular cerebrum with sagittal dorsomedial wulst. The olfactory bulb was small with undeveloped olfactory lobe. The diencephalon gave rise to the pineal gland, which was inverted tubal structure with an obtuse triangle bottom. Large optic chiasm and optic tract demonstrated that continued to the optic lobes. The cerebellum was represented by central vermis that had numerous transverse fissures and two small lateral floccules on its lateral surface. The medulla oblongata with clear pontine flexure and no obvious pons or trapezoid body appeared. The histological results revealed that the cerebral cortex formed of several ill-defined layers of neurons. The most common appearance characterized by few small neurons supported by neuroglia. The cerebellar cortex consists of three layers namely molecular layer, Purkinje cells layer and internal granular layer, the layer of Purkinje cells characterized by a very large cell body. The medulla oblongata was covered by pia mater of loose connective tissue that covered with simple squamous epithelium and vascular supply extended beneath the pia mater. The cell nuclei of the medulla oblongata were formed from few multipolar neurons, supported by few neuroglia. The fourth ventricle was lined by pseudo stratified columnar ciliated ependymal cells.

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Main Authors: Karkoura,Ashraf A, Alsafy,Mohamed A. M, Elgendy,Samir A. A, Eldefrawy,Fatima A
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Sociedad Chilena de Anatomía 2015
Online Access:http://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0717-95022015000400046
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spelling oai:scielo:S0717-950220150004000462016-03-22Morphological Investigation of the Brain of the African Ostrich (Struthio camelus)Karkoura,Ashraf AAlsafy,Mohamed A. MElgendy,Samir A. AEldefrawy,Fatima A Brain Morphology Ostrich The aim of the current study focused on the morphological features of the brain of the African ostrich. The brain was studied macroscopically, microscopically and the measurements of all brain parts were demonstrated. The brain of ostrich was rhombus in shape with large obtuse triangular cerebrum with sagittal dorsomedial wulst. The olfactory bulb was small with undeveloped olfactory lobe. The diencephalon gave rise to the pineal gland, which was inverted tubal structure with an obtuse triangle bottom. Large optic chiasm and optic tract demonstrated that continued to the optic lobes. The cerebellum was represented by central vermis that had numerous transverse fissures and two small lateral floccules on its lateral surface. The medulla oblongata with clear pontine flexure and no obvious pons or trapezoid body appeared. The histological results revealed that the cerebral cortex formed of several ill-defined layers of neurons. The most common appearance characterized by few small neurons supported by neuroglia. The cerebellar cortex consists of three layers namely molecular layer, Purkinje cells layer and internal granular layer, the layer of Purkinje cells characterized by a very large cell body. The medulla oblongata was covered by pia mater of loose connective tissue that covered with simple squamous epithelium and vascular supply extended beneath the pia mater. The cell nuclei of the medulla oblongata were formed from few multipolar neurons, supported by few neuroglia. The fourth ventricle was lined by pseudo stratified columnar ciliated ependymal cells.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessSociedad Chilena de AnatomíaInternational Journal of Morphology v.33 n.4 20152015-12-01text/htmlhttp://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0717-95022015000400046en10.4067/S0717-95022015000400046
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country Chile
countrycode CL
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databasecode rev-scielo-cl
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region America del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language English
format Digital
author Karkoura,Ashraf A
Alsafy,Mohamed A. M
Elgendy,Samir A. A
Eldefrawy,Fatima A
spellingShingle Karkoura,Ashraf A
Alsafy,Mohamed A. M
Elgendy,Samir A. A
Eldefrawy,Fatima A
Morphological Investigation of the Brain of the African Ostrich (Struthio camelus)
author_facet Karkoura,Ashraf A
Alsafy,Mohamed A. M
Elgendy,Samir A. A
Eldefrawy,Fatima A
author_sort Karkoura,Ashraf A
title Morphological Investigation of the Brain of the African Ostrich (Struthio camelus)
title_short Morphological Investigation of the Brain of the African Ostrich (Struthio camelus)
title_full Morphological Investigation of the Brain of the African Ostrich (Struthio camelus)
title_fullStr Morphological Investigation of the Brain of the African Ostrich (Struthio camelus)
title_full_unstemmed Morphological Investigation of the Brain of the African Ostrich (Struthio camelus)
title_sort morphological investigation of the brain of the african ostrich (struthio camelus)
description The aim of the current study focused on the morphological features of the brain of the African ostrich. The brain was studied macroscopically, microscopically and the measurements of all brain parts were demonstrated. The brain of ostrich was rhombus in shape with large obtuse triangular cerebrum with sagittal dorsomedial wulst. The olfactory bulb was small with undeveloped olfactory lobe. The diencephalon gave rise to the pineal gland, which was inverted tubal structure with an obtuse triangle bottom. Large optic chiasm and optic tract demonstrated that continued to the optic lobes. The cerebellum was represented by central vermis that had numerous transverse fissures and two small lateral floccules on its lateral surface. The medulla oblongata with clear pontine flexure and no obvious pons or trapezoid body appeared. The histological results revealed that the cerebral cortex formed of several ill-defined layers of neurons. The most common appearance characterized by few small neurons supported by neuroglia. The cerebellar cortex consists of three layers namely molecular layer, Purkinje cells layer and internal granular layer, the layer of Purkinje cells characterized by a very large cell body. The medulla oblongata was covered by pia mater of loose connective tissue that covered with simple squamous epithelium and vascular supply extended beneath the pia mater. The cell nuclei of the medulla oblongata were formed from few multipolar neurons, supported by few neuroglia. The fourth ventricle was lined by pseudo stratified columnar ciliated ependymal cells.
publisher Sociedad Chilena de Anatomía
publishDate 2015
url http://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0717-95022015000400046
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