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Interpeduncular nucleus

The Interpeduncular nucleus is an unpaired, ovoid cell group at the base of the midbrain tegmentum. It is located in the mesencephalon below the interpeduncular fossa. As the name suggests, the interpeduncular nucleus lies in between the cerebral peduncles. The Interpeduncular nucleus is an unpaired, ovoid cell group at the base of the midbrain tegmentum. It is located in the mesencephalon below the interpeduncular fossa. As the name suggests, the interpeduncular nucleus lies in between the cerebral peduncles. The Interpeduncular nucleus is primarily GABAergic and contains at least two neuron clusters of different morphologies. The region is divided into 7 paired and unpaired subnuclei The presence of non-homologous subdivisions of the Interpeduncular nucleus was first noticed by Cajal over a hundred years ago. The currently recognized standard subdivision notation was mostly established by Hammill and Lenn in 1984 by combining the work and notations of four groups. Although most of their proposed convention stuck, at some point the proposed 'rostral lateral' sub-nucleus was renamed 'dorsomedial' and became immortalized in brain atlases. Unpaired sub-nucleus. Former names include 'caudal dorsal', 'dorsal', and 'pars dorsalis magnocellularis.' Unpaired sub-nucleus. Former names include: 'rostral ventral', 'caudal central', 'posterior inter', and 'pars medianus'.

[ "Midbrain", "Central nervous system", "Nucleus", "Fasciculus retroflexus", "Medial habenula", "Nucleus Habenularis", "Dorsal tegmental nucleus", "Ventral Tegmental Nucleus" ]
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