The Crocodylian proatlas functions to redistribute venous blood and cerebrospinal fluid

The proatlas, a bone located between the skull and the neural spines of the cervical vertebrae, is best known from reptiles. Most previous studies of the proatlas have centered on its developmental, debating the relationship between the proatlas and the cervical neural arches. The present study was...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of morphology (1931) 2024-03, Vol.285 (3), p.e21683-n/a
Hauptverfasser: Swords, Annelise, Cramberg, Michael, Parker, Seth, Scott, Anchal, Sopko, Stephanie, Taylor, Ethan, Young, Bruce A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The proatlas, a bone located between the skull and the neural spines of the cervical vertebrae, is best known from reptiles. Most previous studies of the proatlas have centered on its developmental, debating the relationship between the proatlas and the cervical neural arches. The present study was intended as a description of the proatlas in the American alligator (Alligator mississippiensis) and an experimental test of its hypothesized role in venous blood and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) distribution. In Alligator, the proatlas is chevron‐shaped; ventrally it has a loose connection to the dorsal surface of the first cervical vertebrae, dorsally it has a robust elastic tissue tether on the otoccipital and supraoccipital bones. The ventral surface of the proatlas parallels the dorsal margin of the foramen magnum and rests on the dorsal surface of the spinal venous sinus. Experimental manipulation of the proatlas demonstrated that displacement of the proatlas causes pressure changes in both the spinal venous sinus and the enclosed spinal CSF. The results of this study represent the first demonstration of an explicit functional role for the proatlas, the circulation of fluids between the cranial and spinal compartments of the central nervous system. In Crocodylians the proatlas is positioned between the caudal surface of the skull and the cervical neural spines; the ventral surface of this bone rests on the surface of the spinal venous sinus. The proatlas is not fixed in place, only loosely anchored to C1 ventrally and the supraoccipital dorsally. This study demonstrates that in Alligator mississippiensis, physical displacement of the proatlas alters the fluid pressure of the spinal sinus venous blood as well as the spinal cerebrospinal fluid.
ISSN:0362-2525
1097-4687
DOI:10.1002/jmor.21683