Variability in the human entorhinal region may confound neuropsychiatric diagnoses.

  • H Heinsen
  • E Gössmann
  • U Rüb
  • W Eisenmenger
  • M Bauer
  • G Ulmar
  • B Bethke
  • M Schüler
  • H P Schmitt
  • M Götz
  • Ute Lockemann
  • K Püschel

Beteiligte Einrichtungen

Abstract

The human entorhinal region consists of a number of areas; however, there is no generally accepted nomenclature for these cytoarchitectonic fields, and the designation of its constituent layers or strata is a matter of controversy. Here, we consider a hitherto neglected adjacent field, the preamygdaloid claustrocortex. Its medial subfield has a small common border with the rostromedial entorhinal region (width maximal 2 mm). Both fields are cytoarchitectonically rather similar. The rostromedial oral entorhinal field lacks ascending terminal islands. Its unusually small pre-alpha cells are arranged in a thin band or small clusters consisting of pyramidal, triangular, or polymorphic cells. The conspicuous chromophilic pre-beta cell clusters are composed of a variety of cell types, including groups of 'immature' spindle-shaped or bipolar nerve cells. Furthermore, a rare sulcus within the entorhinal region (central sulcus of the entorhinal region: observed in 4% of the 450 brains examined) is associated with an unusual lamination of the entorhinal layers in its wall and floor. Both the specific shape and arrangement of neurones in the claustrocortical-rostral entorhinal border region and the unusual lamination within the rare central entorhinal sulcus are regarded as reflecting neurodevelopmental disturbances characteristic of schizophrenic brains. In contrast, our observations in a large sample of serially sectioned brains from controls, schizophrenics, and patients suffering from neuropsychiatric diseases other than schizophrenia do not support this assumption.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheDeutsch
Aufsatznummer3
ISSN0001-5180
StatusVeröffentlicht - 1996
pubmed 9226042