Rexed laminae

Medulla spinalis - Substantia grisea
Rexed lamina

The Rexed laminae comprise a system of ten layers of grey matter (I-X), identified in the early 1950s by Bror Rexed to label portions of the grey columns of the spinal cord.[1][2]

Similar to Brodmann areas, they are defined by their cellular structure rather than by their location, but the location still remains reasonably consistent.

Laminae

References

  1. Rexed B (1952). "The cytoarchitectonic organization of the spinal cord in the cat.". J Comp Neurol. 96 (3): 414–95. PMID 14946260. doi:10.1002/cne.900960303.
  2. Rexed B (1954). "A cytoarchitectonic atlas of the spinal cord in the cat.". J Comp Neurol. 100 (2): 297–379. PMID 13163236. doi:10.1002/cne.901000205.
  3. Darby, Susan A., and Cramer, Gregory D. (2013). Clinical Anatomy of the Spine, Spinal Cord and ANS. Saint Louis, MO, USA: Mosby. pp. 341–413. ISBN 978-0323079549.
  4. Woolsey, Robert M.; Vernon W. Lin; Cardenas, Diana D.; Cutter, Nancy C.; Frederick S. Frost; Margaret C. Hammond; Laurie B. Lindblom; Inder Perkash; Robert Waters (2002). Spinal Cord Medicine: Principles and Practice. Demos Medical Publishing. ISBN 1-888799-61-7.
  5. 1 2 3 Blumenfeld, Hal (2010). Neuroanatomy through Clinical Cases. Sunderland, MA: Sinauer Associates.
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