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| Schmidt-Lanterman incisures | |
|---|---|
| Diagram of longitudinal sections of medullated nerve fibers. (Incisure labeled at upper left.) | |
| Gray's | subject #183 727 |
| Dorlands/Elsevier | i_05/12447772 |
In the peripheral nervous system (PNS) axons can be either myelinated or unmyelinated. Myelination means that the axon is insulated by surrounding it with layers of fatty membrane (myelin). These layers are continuous (like rolling up rope), but due to the way they are formed they often include small amounts of cytoplasm. These are the so called Schmidt-Lanterman cleft (a.k.a. Schmidt-Lanterman incisures,clefts of Schmidt-Lanterman, segments of Lanterman, medullary segments), which subdivide the myelinated axon into irregular portions. They are histological evidence of the small amount of cytoplasm that remains in the inner layer of the myelin sheath created by Schwann cells wrapping tightly around a nerve.
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The content of this section is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License (local copy). It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Schmidt-Lanterman incisures" modified December 22, 2007 with previous authors listed in its history.