- Medial septal nucleus
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Brain: Medial septal nucleus Latin nucleus septalis medialis The medial septal nucleus is one of the septal nuclei. Neurons in this nucleus give rise to the bulk of efferents from the septal nuclei. A major projection from the medial septal nucleus terminates in the hippocampal formation.[1]
It plays a role in the generation of theta waves.[2]
References
- ^ Brodal, A (1981). Neurological Anatomy. New York, N.Y.: Oxford University Press. http://braininfo.rprc.washington.edu/Source.aspx?ID=126&questID=&questID=2272. Retrieved 18 Jun 2011.
- ^ O'Keefe, John; Andersen, Per; Morris, Richard; David Amaral; Tim Bliss (2007). The hippocampus book. Oxford [Oxfordshire]: Oxford University Press. pp. 480. ISBN 0-19-510027-1.
Human brain, cerebrum, Interior of the cerebral hemispheres, white matter: commissural fibers and septum (TA A14.1.09.241–271, 569–571, GA 9.828, 838–840) Corpus callosum Genu · Splenium · Tapetum · Rostrum
Archicortex: Indusium griseumLamina terminalis Fornix Septum pellucidum Neurotransmitter systems Acetylcholine Nucleus basalis of Meynert → Neocortex
Septal nuclei (Medial septal nucleus) → Fornix → Hippocampus
StriatumBA/M Mesocortical pathway: Ventral tegmental area → Frontal cortex
Mesolimbic pathway: Ventral tegmental area → Nucleus accumbens
Nigrostriatal pathway: Pars compacta → Striatum
Tuberoinfundibular pathway: Hypothalamus → Pituitary glandSerotonin pathwaysAA This anatomy article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.