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首页> 外文期刊>The Anatomical record >Neuromuscular organization of the pectoralis (pars thoracicus) of the pigeon (Columba livia): Implications for motor control
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Neuromuscular organization of the pectoralis (pars thoracicus) of the pigeon (Columba livia): Implications for motor control

机译:Neuromuscular organization of the pectoralis (pars thoracicus) of the pigeon (Columba livia): Implications for motor control

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AbstractThe pectoralis (pars thoracicus) of the domestic pigeon (Columba livia) is divisible into two anatomical parts, the pars sternobrachialis (SB) and the pars thoracobrachialis (TB). Innervation to this complex is from rostral and caudal branches of the brachial ventral cord. In four anesthetized pigeons, the distribution of muscle units associated with each nerve branch was mapped after prolonged stimulation of each nerve and subsequent analysis for muscle fiber glycogen. An additional three animals were used to analyze the morphology, distribution, and histochemical profiles of the muscle fibers in the SB and TB subregions. Fibers were characterized on the basis of their reactions for myofibrillar adenosine triphosphates (alkaline and acid preincubation) and reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide diaphorase (NADH‐D). The SB is primarily innervated by the rostral nerve branch and the TB by the caudal nerve branch. For two‐thirds of the muscle's length, the SB is separated from the TB by an aponeurosis, the membrana intermuscularis (MI). SB and TB fibers located posteroventral to the caudal margin of the MI are innervated variously by both nerves. Two populations of fibers were recognized, distinguishable primarily by (1) fiber diameter and (2) density of the NADH‐D reaction product. Compared to the TB, the SB possesses a higher average percentage of large fibers. Within the SB but not the TB the percentage of large fibers increases from deep to superficial. These data support our previous findings that the pars thoracicus of the pigeon is partitioned into at least two functional subunits, each with a potential for independent action on the wing during f

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