PMID: 6167912May 29, 1981Paper

The afferent innervation of the liver: a horseradish peroxidase study in the rat

Neuroscience Letters
C Carobi, F Magni

Abstract

Scattered injections of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) into the rat liver produced labeling of a small number of large neurons located only in the rostral pole of the left nodose ganglion. The same amount injected in a single lobe also produced labeling of a few cells in Th7-Th10 dorsal root ganglia. No retrograde marking followed subcapsular injections. HRP injections around the porta hepatis yielded labeling of large and small neurons in the left nodose ganglion only. This indicates that most of the afferent fibers are of vagal origin, and that different receptors are located in different parts of the liver.

References

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Citations

May 1, 1987·Pflügers Archiv : European journal of physiology·D Banks, M C Harris
Jan 15, 1990·Experientia·C Carobi
Jan 1, 1996·Physiology & Behavior·C C Horn, J C Mitchell
Nov 1, 1983·Journal of the Autonomic Nervous System·G E HermannR C Rogers
Feb 1, 1983·Journal of the Autonomic Nervous System·R C Rogers, G E Hermann
Jan 1, 1983·Progress in Neurobiology·W W Lautt
Dec 4, 1985·Neuroscience Letters·C CarobiF Magni
Aug 15, 1997·The Journal of Clinical Investigation·G PerseghinL Luzi
Sep 24, 2004·The Anatomical Record. Part A, Discoveries in Molecular, Cellular, and Evolutionary Biology·Jean-Marie DelalandeAlan J Burns
Dec 1, 1983·The Anatomical Record·H W BurdenI E Lawrence
Feb 1, 1986·Australian and New Zealand Journal of Medicine·M MackinnonR A Smallwood

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