decussation

{{Short description|Biological term to describe a crossing}}

{{Distinguish|Desiccation|Chiasm (anatomy)|Commissure}}

File:Gray688.png at the level of the decussation of the pyramids]]

Decussation is used in biological contexts to describe a crossing (due to the shape of the Roman numeral for ten, an uppercase 'X' ({{lang|la|decussis}}), {{ety|la|decem|ten||as|as}}). In Latin anatomical terms, the form {{lang|la|decussatio}} is used, e.g. {{lang|la|decussatio pyramidum}}.

Similarly, the anatomical term chiasma is named after the Greek uppercase 'Χ' (chi). Whereas a decussation refers to a crossing within the central nervous system, various kinds of crossings in the peripheral nervous system are called chiasma.

Examples include:

File:Dysdercus decussatus (13476425975).jpg, the specific epithet refers to the bandolier-like markings on the back.}}]]

  • In taxonomic description where decussate markings or structures occur, names such as {{lang|la|decussatus}} or {{lang|la|decussata}} or otherwise in part containing "decuss..." are common, especially in the specific epithet.{{cite book |author=Jaeger, Edmund C.|author-link=Edmund Jaeger |title=A source-book of biological names and terms |url=https://archive.org/details/sourcebookofbiol0000jaeg |url-access=registration |publisher=Thomas |location=Springfield, Ill |year=1959 |isbn=0-398-06179-3 }}

Evolutionary significance

The origin of the contralateral organization, the optic chiasm and the major decussations on the nervous system of vertebrates has been a long standing puzzle to scientists.{{cite journal | first1=S. | last1=Vulliemoz | first2=O. | last2=Raineteau | first3=D. | last3=Jabaudon | title=Reaching beyond the midline: why are human brains cross wired? | journal=The Lancet Neurology | volume=4 | issue=2 | date=2005 | pages=87–99 | doi=10.1016/S1474-4422(05)00990-7 | pmid=15664541 | s2cid=16367031}} The visual map theory of Ramón y Cajal has long been popular{{cite journal | last=Ramón y Cajal | first=Santiago | title=Estructura del quiasma óptico y teoría general de los entrecruzamientos de las vías nerviosas. (Structure of the Chiasma opticum and general theory of the crossing of nerve tracks) | journal=Rev. Trim. Micrográfica | year=1898 | volume=3 | pages=15–65 | trans-title= Die Structur des Chiasma opticum nebst einer allgemeine Theorie der Kreuzung der Nervenbahnen (German, 1899, Verlag Joh. A. Barth) | language=es}}{{cite journal | first1=R.R. | last1=Llinás | title=The contribution of Santiago Ramón y Cajal to functional neuroscience. | journal=Nat. Rev. Neurosci. | volume=4 | issue=1 | date=2003 | pages=77–80 | doi=10.1038/nrn1011 | pmid=12511864 | s2cid=30442863}} but has been criticized for its logical inconsistence.{{cite journal | last1=de Lussanet | first1=M.H.E. | last2=Osse | first2=J.W.M. | title=Decussation as an axial twist: A comment on Kinsbourne (2013) | journal=Neuropsychology | volume=29 | issue=5 | year=2015 | pages=713–14 | doi=10.1037/neu0000163 | pmid=25528610 | url=https://peerj.com/preprints/432v3.pdf | access-date=2020-01-01 | archive-date=2021-07-14 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210714184518/https://peerj.com/preprints/432v3.pdf | url-status=dead }} More recently, it has been proposed that the decussations are caused by an axial twist by which the anterior head, along with the forebrain, is turned by 180° with respect to the rest of the body.{{cite journal | first1=M.H.E. | last1=de Lussanet | first2=J.W.M. | last2=Osse | year=2012 | title=An ancestral axial twist explains the contralateral forebain and the optic chiasm in vertebrates | journal=Animal Biology | volume=62 | issue=2 | pages=193–216 | doi=10.1163/157075611X617102 | arxiv=1003.1872 | s2cid=7399128}}{{cite journal |last1=Kinsbourne |first1=M |title=Somatic twist: a model for the evolution of decussation. |journal=Neuropsychology|date=Sep 2013 |volume=27 |issue=5 |pages=511–15 |doi=10.1037/a0033662 |pmid=24040928}}

See also

References

{{Reflist}}

Further reading

  • [https://neuroscience.stanford.edu/news/ask-neuroscientist-why-does-nervous-system-decussate Why does the nervous system decussate?]: Stanford Neuroblog
  • {{Cite web |last=Fields |first=R. Douglas |date=2023-04-19 |title=Why the Brain's Connections to the Body Are Crisscrossed |url=https://www.quantamagazine.org/why-the-brains-connections-to-the-body-are-crisscrossed-20230419/ |website=Quanta Magazine}}