The Cranial Nerve 0 (nervus terminalis) in Adult Humans

Introduction: Cranial nerve 0 (nervus terminalis) was identified in adult humans in 1914 medial to the olfactory nerve (CN1) and has been hypothesised to be responsive to pheromones, therefore playing a role in reproductive behaviour. Animal studies revealed the presence of GnRH neurons in the nerve...

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Main Authors: Czernichowska, E, Rea, Paul
Format: Conference Object
Language:unknown
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/174138/
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spelling ftuglasgow:oai:eprints.gla.ac.uk:174138 2023-05-15T18:33:32+02:00 The Cranial Nerve 0 (nervus terminalis) in Adult Humans Czernichowska, E Rea, Paul 2018-11-17 http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/174138/ unknown Czernichowska, E. and Rea, P. <http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/view/author/10252.html> (2018) The Cranial Nerve 0 (nervus terminalis) in Adult Humans. Glasgow Neuro Conference, Glasgow, UK, 17 Nov 2018. Conference or Workshop Item PeerReviewed 2018 ftuglasgow 2020-01-10T01:47:12Z Introduction: Cranial nerve 0 (nervus terminalis) was identified in adult humans in 1914 medial to the olfactory nerve (CN1) and has been hypothesised to be responsive to pheromones, therefore playing a role in reproductive behaviour. Animal studies revealed the presence of GnRH neurons in the nerve, which is genetically different from the GnRH neurones of the hypothalamus, suggesting a neuromodulatory role in reproductive function. However, there has been much debate about its presence in humans. Methods and Materials: We examined 11 formalin-fixed cadaveric brains using gross and histological techniques to try to identify the nervus terminalis. Results: We found that fibre-like structures were identified on visual examination using a surgical microscope. In addition, approximately 830 Masson’s trichrome stained sections were examined, taken from the base of the frontal lobes, adjacent and separate to the olfactory nerve. We found fibres adjacent to the olfactory nerve which, although not definitive of the presence of a nervus terminalis, could suggest an anastomosis between the olfactory nerve and a possible nervus terminalis. Discussion/Conclusions: It has been shown that in toothed whales the olfactory nerve disappears and the nervus terminalis persists. It could be hypothesised that a nervus terminalis could be an extension of the olfactory nerve and could be considered when discussing human pheromone responses. Elzbieta Czernichowska will be the presenting author and is in her fourth (final) year of the BSc (Hons) Anatomy degree programme at the University of Glasgow Conference Object toothed whales University of Glasgow: Enlighten - Publications
institution Open Polar
collection University of Glasgow: Enlighten - Publications
op_collection_id ftuglasgow
language unknown
description Introduction: Cranial nerve 0 (nervus terminalis) was identified in adult humans in 1914 medial to the olfactory nerve (CN1) and has been hypothesised to be responsive to pheromones, therefore playing a role in reproductive behaviour. Animal studies revealed the presence of GnRH neurons in the nerve, which is genetically different from the GnRH neurones of the hypothalamus, suggesting a neuromodulatory role in reproductive function. However, there has been much debate about its presence in humans. Methods and Materials: We examined 11 formalin-fixed cadaveric brains using gross and histological techniques to try to identify the nervus terminalis. Results: We found that fibre-like structures were identified on visual examination using a surgical microscope. In addition, approximately 830 Masson’s trichrome stained sections were examined, taken from the base of the frontal lobes, adjacent and separate to the olfactory nerve. We found fibres adjacent to the olfactory nerve which, although not definitive of the presence of a nervus terminalis, could suggest an anastomosis between the olfactory nerve and a possible nervus terminalis. Discussion/Conclusions: It has been shown that in toothed whales the olfactory nerve disappears and the nervus terminalis persists. It could be hypothesised that a nervus terminalis could be an extension of the olfactory nerve and could be considered when discussing human pheromone responses. Elzbieta Czernichowska will be the presenting author and is in her fourth (final) year of the BSc (Hons) Anatomy degree programme at the University of Glasgow
format Conference Object
author Czernichowska, E
Rea, Paul
spellingShingle Czernichowska, E
Rea, Paul
The Cranial Nerve 0 (nervus terminalis) in Adult Humans
author_facet Czernichowska, E
Rea, Paul
author_sort Czernichowska, E
title The Cranial Nerve 0 (nervus terminalis) in Adult Humans
title_short The Cranial Nerve 0 (nervus terminalis) in Adult Humans
title_full The Cranial Nerve 0 (nervus terminalis) in Adult Humans
title_fullStr The Cranial Nerve 0 (nervus terminalis) in Adult Humans
title_full_unstemmed The Cranial Nerve 0 (nervus terminalis) in Adult Humans
title_sort cranial nerve 0 (nervus terminalis) in adult humans
publishDate 2018
url http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/174138/
genre toothed whales
genre_facet toothed whales
op_relation Czernichowska, E. and Rea, P. <http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/view/author/10252.html> (2018) The Cranial Nerve 0 (nervus terminalis) in Adult Humans. Glasgow Neuro Conference, Glasgow, UK, 17 Nov 2018.
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