981 resultados para système ventral-dorsal
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Fan worms (Sabellidae) possess paired modified prostomial structures at the base of the radiolar crown, dorso-lateral to the mouth, called dorsal lips. The dorsal lips are involved in the sorting of particles collected by the radiolar crown. The range of variation in the morphology of dorsal lips is extensive, and probably this is not only due to adaptations to different environments and feeding preferences but also due to phylogenetic constraints. In this study, we describe and compare the morphology of dorsal lips in a range of sabellid taxa based on histological cross-sections of these structures, and compare our data and terminology with those of previous studies. Dorsal lips are maintained erect in most taxa by a modified radiole fused to them known as dorsal radiolar appendage. We suggest that dorsal radiolar appendages with an internal supporting axis (cellular or acellular) and probably also the ventral lips are synapomorphies of the family. J. Morphol. 272: 302-319, 2011. (C) 2010 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
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The dorsal premammillary nucleus (PMd) is one of the most responsive hypothalamic sites during exposure to a predator or its odor, and to a context previously associated with a predatory threat; and lesions or pharmacological inactivation centered therein severely reduced the anti-predatory defensive responses. Previous studies have shown that beta adrenergic transmission in the PMd seems critical to the expression of fear responses to predatory threats. In the present study, we have investigated the putative sources of catecholaminergic inputs to the PMd. To this end, we have first described the general pattern of catecholaminergic innervation of the PMd by examining the distribution and morphology of the tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) immunoreactive fibers in the nucleus; and next, combining Fluoro Gold (FG) tracing experiments and TH immunostaining, we determined the putative sources of catecholaminergic inputs to the nucleus. Our results revealed that the PMd presents a moderately dense plexus of catecholaminergic fibers that seems to encompass the rostral pole and ventral border of the nucleus. Combining the results of the FG tract-tracing and TH immunostaining, we observed that the locus coeruleus was the sole brain site that contained double FG and TH immunostained cells. In summary, the evidence suggests that the locus coeruleus is seemingly a part of the circuit responding to predatory threats, and, as shown by the present results, is the sole source of catecholaminergic inputs to the PMd, providing noradrenergic inputs to the nucleus, which, by acting via beta adrenoceptor, seems to be critical for the expression of anti-predatory responses. (C) 2011 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.
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In this study we provide a comprehensive analysis of the hypothalamic activation pattern during exposure to a live predator or an environment previously associated with a predator. Our results support the view that hypothalamic processing of the actual and the contextual predatory threats share the same circuit, in which the dorsal premammillary nucleus (PMd) plays a pivotal role in amplifying this processing. To further understand the role of the PMd in the circuit organizing antipredatory defensive behaviors, we studied rats with cytotoxic PMd lesions during cat exposure and examined the pattern of behavioral responses as well as how PMd lesions affect the neuronal activation of the systems engaged in predator detection, in contextual memory formation and in defensive behavioral responses. Next, we investigated how pharmacological blockade of the PMd interferes with the conditioned behavioral responses to a context previously associated with a predator, and how this blockade affects the activation pattern of periaqueductal gray (PAG) sites likely to organize the conditioned behavioral responses to the predatory context. Behavioral observations indicate that the PMd interferes with both unconditioned and conditioned antipredatory defensive behavior. Moreover, we have shown that the PMd influences the activation of its major projecting targets, i.e. the ventral part of the anteromedial thalamic nucleus which is likely to influence mnemonic processing, and PAG sites involved in the expression of antipredatory unconditioned and conditioned behavioral responses. Of particular relevance, this work provides evidence to elucidate the basic organization of the neural circuits integrating unconditioned and contextual conditioned responses to predatory threats.
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The dorsal striatum (DS) is involved in various forms of learning and memory such as procedural learning, habit learning, reward-association and emotional learning. We have previously reported that bilateral DS lesions disrupt tone fear conditioning (TFC), but not contextual fear conditioning (CFC) [Ferreira TL, Moreira KM, Ikeda DC, Bueno OFA, Oliveira MGM (2003) Effects of dorsal striatum lesions in tone fear conditioning and contextual fear conditioning. Brain Res 987:17-24]. To further elucidate the participation of DS in emotional learning, in the present study, we investigated the effects of bilateral pretest (postraining) electrolytic DS lesions on TFC. Given the well-acknowledged role of the amygdala in emotional learning, we also examined a possible cooperation between DS and the amygdala in TFC, by using asymmetrical electrolytic lesions, consisting of a unilateral lesion of the central amygdaloid nucleus (CeA) combined to a contralateral DS lesion. The results show that pre-test bilateral DS lesions disrupt TFC responses, suggesting that DS plays a role in the expression of TFC. More importantly, rats with asymmetrical pre-training lesions were impaired in TFC, but not in CFC tasks. This result was confirmed with muscimol asymmetrical microinjections in DS and CeA, which reversibly inactivate these structures. On the other hand, similar pretest lesions as well as unilateral electrolytic lesions of CeA and DS in the same hemisphere did not affect TFC. Possible anatomical substrates underlying the observed effects are proposed. Overall, the present results underscore that other routes, aside from the well-established CeA projections to the periaqueductal gray, may contribute to the acquisition/consolidation of the freezing response associated to a TFC task. It is suggested that CeA may presumably influence DS processing via a synaptic relay on dopaminergic neurons of the substantia nigra compacta and retrorubral nucleus. The present observations are also in line with other studies showing that TFC and CFC responses are mediated by different anatomical networks. (C) 2008 IBRO. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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The prefrontal cortex (PFC) receives strong inputs from monoaminergic cell groups in the brainstem and also sends projections to these nuclei. Recent evidence suggests that the PFC exerts a powerful top-down control over the dorsal raphe nucleus (DR) and that it may be involved in the actions of pharmaceutical drugs and drugs of abuse. In the light of these findings, the precise origin of prefrontal inputs to DR was presently investigated by using the cholera toxin subunit b (CTb) as retrograde tracer. All the injections placed in DR produced retrograde labeling in the medial, orbital, and lateral divisions of the PFC as well as in the medial part of the frontal polar cortex. The labeling was primarily located in layer V. Remarkably, labeling in the medial PFC was denser in its ventral part (infralimbic and ventral prelimbic cortices) than in its dorsal part (dorsal prelimbic, anterior cingulate and medial precentral cortices). After injections in the rostral or caudal DR, the largest number of labeled neurons was observed in the medial PFC, whereas after injections in the mid-rostrocaudal DR, the labeled neurons were more homogeneously distributed in the three main PFC divisions. A cluster of labeled neurons also was observed around the apex of the rostral pole of the accumbens, especially after rostral and mid-rostrocaudal DR injections. Overall, these results confirm the existence of robust preftontal projections to DR, mainly derived from the ventral part of the medial PFC, and underscore a substantial contribution of the frontal polar cortex. (C) 2008 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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The ventral tegmental area (VTA) is a nodal link in reward circuitry. Based on its striatal output, it has been subdivided in a caudomedial part which targets the ventromedial striatum, and a lateral part which targets the ventrolateral striatum [Ikemoto S (2007) Dopamine reward circuitry: two projection systems from the ventral midbrain to the nucleus accumbens-olfactory tubercle complex. Brain Res Rev 56:27-78]. Whether these two VTA parts are interconnected and to what extent the VTA innervates the substantia nigra compacta (SNc) and retrorubral nucleus (RR) are critical issues for understanding information processing in the basal ganglia. Here, VTA projections to the VTA-nigral complex were examined in rats, using Phaseolus vulgaris leucoagglutinin (PHA-L) as anterograde tracer. The results show that the dorsolateral VTA projects to itself, as well as to the dorsal tier of the SNc and RR, largely avoiding the caudomedial VTA. The ventrolateral VTA innervates mainly the interfascicular nucleus. The components of the caudomedial VTA (the interfascicular, paranigral and caudal linear nuclei) are connected with each other. In addition, the caudomedial VTA (especially the paranigral and caudal linear nuclei) innervates the lateral VTA, and, to a lesser degree, the SNc and RR. The caudal pole of the VTA sends robust, bilateral projections to virtually all the VTA-nigral complex, which terminate in the dorsal and ventral tiers. Modest inputs from the medial supramammillary nucleus to ventromedial parts of the VTA-nigral complex were also identified. In double-immunostained sections, PHA-L-labeled varicosities were sometimes found apposed to tyrosine hydroxylase-positive neurons in the ventral mesencephalon. Overall, the results underscore that VTA projections to the VTA-nigral complex are substantial and topically organized. In general, these projections, like the spiralated striato-nigro-striatal loops, display a medial-to-lateral organization. This anatomical arrangement conceivably permits the ventromedial striatum to influence the activity of the lateral striatum. The caudal pole of the VTA appears to be a critical site for a global recruitment of the mesotelencephalic system. (C) 2008 IBRO. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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A amígdala medial (AMe) é um dos núcleos superficiais do complexo amigdalóide que pode ser dividido de acordo com critérios citoarquitetônicos e hodológicos em 4 subnúcleos distintos: ântero-dorsal (AMeAD), ântero-ventral (AMeAV), póstero-ventral (AMePV) e póstero-dorsal (AMePD). Destes, a AMePD, dentre outras funções, está envolvida na regulação do comportamento sexual de roedores. Em ratos, este subnúcleo é uma estrutura sexualmente dimórfica, com ampla quantidade de receptores para hormônios gonadais e que se apresenta subdividida em três colunas celulares: medial (AMePDm), intermediária (AMePDi) e lateral (AMePDl). O presente trabalho teve como objetivos estudar a densidade de espinhos dendríticos na AMePDm e na AMePDl as quais, em ratos, estão relacionadas com os comportamentos de intromissão peniana e ejaculação, respectivamente. Também estudou-se os efeitos da castração com curta (8 dias) e longa (90 dias) duração na densidade dos espinhos dendríticos na AMePD. Todos os animais foram anestesiados e perfundidos, tiveram seus encéfalos seccionados em cortes coronais de 200 µm de espessura e submetidos à técnica de Golgi. Após, os espinhos foram desenhados ao longo dos primeiros 40 µm dendríticos com auxílio de uma câmara clara acoplada a microscópio óptico e tiveram sua densidade calculada. A análise estatística demonstrou que não há diferença significativa na densidade de espinhos dendríticos entre os neurônios da AMePDm e AMePDl quando comparadas entre si. Esses resultados sugerem que, embora funcionalmente diferentes, essas regiões parecem estar realizando contatos sinápticos em número similares. Ainda não está claro se estes espinhos são necessários para possibilitar que cada subregião contribua para um aspecto específico do comportamento sexual masculino. Por outro lado, a análise estatística também revelou que a castração por si só não é capaz de alterar a densidade de espinhos dendríticos nos neurônios da AMePD a curto prazo mas, por outro lado, que a castração de longa duração causou uma redução significativa na densidade de espinhos dendríticos em relação aos animais controle neste subnúcleo, evidenciando a ação da testosterona na manutenção da integridade morfológica a longo prazo nos neurônios da AMePD e sua importância para a plasticidade sináptica nesta região.
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A amígdala medial (AMe) é um núcleo superficial do complexo amigdalóide e que ocupa seu aspecto rostromedial. A AMe modula uma série de comportamentos além de modular a memória e o aprendizado associado a estímulos olfativos e visuais. Em ratos é uma estrutura sexualmente dimórfica e está dividida em quatro subnúcleos: ântero-dorsal (AMeAD), ântero-ventral (AMeAV), póstero-dorsal (AMePD) e pósteroventral (AMePV). A AMe apresenta células com características morfológicas variadas e receptores para hormônios gonadais amplamente distribuídos entre todos os seus subnúcleos, mas principalmente na AMePD. O presente trabalho teve por objetivo estudar a ação dos esteróides sexuais na densidade de espinhos dendríticos na AMePD de ratas ovariectomizadas e se sua ação pode ser mediada pelos receptores do tipo NMDA. Para tanto, foram utilizadas ratas Wistar adultas (n = 6 por grupo experimental, descritos a seguir) que foram ovariectomizadas e injetadas com veículo oleoso (“O”; 0,1ml s.c.); benzoato de estradiol (“BE”; 10μg/0,1ml s.c.); benzoato de estradiol e progesterona (“BE+P”; 10μg/0,1ml e 500μg/0,1ml s.c.). Adicionalmente, foram estudadas fêmeas ovariectomizadas e que receberam benzoato de estradiol e salina (“BE+S”; 10μg/0,1ml s.c. e 0,2 ml i.p.) ou benzoato de estradiol e LY235959, antagonista específico dos receptores do tipo NMDA para o glutamato (“BE+LY235959”; 10μg/0,1ml s.c. e 3mg/Kg i.p.). Todas as injeções foram feitas ao longo de 4 dias. Cinco horas após a última injeção, os animais foram anestesiados e submetidos à técnica de Golgi do tipo “single-section”. Os encéfalos foram seccionados em vibrátomo e os cortes foram colocados, após fixação, em solução de bicromato de potássio e, a seguir, em nitrato de prata. Neurônios bem impregnados e indubitavelmente presentes na AMePD foram selecionados para estudo. Os espinhos presentes nos primeiros 40 μm dendríticos foram desenhados com auxílio de uma câmara clara acoplada a microscópio óptico em aumento de 1000X. Cada animal teve 8 ramos dendríticos selecionados, um por neurônio diferente, perfazendo 48 ramos ao total em cada grupo experimental. Os valores obtidos foram submetidos à análise de variância (ANOVA) de uma via e ao teste post hoc de Bonferroni (primeiros 3 grupos) ou ao teste “t” de Student não-pareado (últimos 2 grupos), ambos com α = 5%. Os resultados indicaram que as ratas que foram ovariectomizadas e tratadas com O, BE e BE+P apresentaram uma diferença estatisticamente significante entre si [F(2,143) = 104,24; p < 0,001]. Os grupos BE e BE+P (média ± epm = 1,91 ± 0,04 e 2,67 ± 0,05, respectivamente) apresentaram maior densidade de espinhos dendríticos na AMePD quando comparados ao grupo controle injetado com óleo (1,60 ± 0,05; p < 0,001). Adicionalmente, nos grupos BE+S e BE+LY235959, a densidade de espinhos dendríticos diminuiu no grupo que recebeu o antagonista dos receptores do tipo NMDA (2,02 ± 0,04) em relação ao que recebeu salina (2,15 ± 0,04; p = 0,04). O presente estudo sugere que a densidade de espinhos dendríticos na AMePD é afetada pelos hormônios gonadais femininos, sendo que a progesterona potencializa o efeito do estradiol. De forma muito interessante, a ação do estradiol parece ocorrer, pelo menos em parte, pela interação com receptores do tipo NMDA. Esses resultados podem contribuir para o entendimento da plasticidade morfológica e sináptica representada pela densidade de espinhos dendríticos na AMePD, a qual parece ser mediada pelos esteróides sexuais e em área do sistema nervoso relacionada com a modulação de comportamento reprodutivo feminino.
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A dor constitui uma experiência complexa, mediada por distintos sistemas de transmissão sendo integrados por diversos mecanismos neurais. Um dos modelos mais empregados para o estudo da dor neuropática é a secção nervosa periférica, a qual resulta em alterações neuroquímicas e neuroanatômicas em neurônios sensoriais primários e em seus territórios de projeção. Após a secção do nervo ciático, os mamíferos apresentam um aumento na expressão de genes precocemente expressos, como o c-Fos e o c-Jun, no corno dorsal da medula espinal. Animais não mamíferos, como os anfíbios, também vem sendo utilizados como modelos para os estudos dos mecanismos acerca da nocicepção. No presente estudo foi analisado o padrão de imunorreatividade à proteína c-Fos na medula espinal lombossacral e no gânglio da raiz dorsal (GRD) de rãs Rana catesbeiana em condições basais, bem como de rãs submetidas à manipulação e à secção do nervo ciático. Para isso foram utilizados animais adultos, de ambos os sexos, sendo que os mesmos foram sacrificados 3 dias após o procedimento cirúrgico. A técnica imunoistoquímica utilizada foi a do anticorpo não marcado de Sternberger (1979), sendo utilizado anticorpo primário do tipo policlonal, na concentração de 1:700. As alterações no padrão de imunorreatividade a esta proteína no GRD dos três grupos experimentais foram quantificadas através das técnicas de densitometria óptica e contagem neuronal. Para a quantificação da proteína c-Fos na medula espinal lombossacral dos 3 grupos experimentais, utilizou-se a técnica de western blot. Em GRD, a imunorreatividade foi mais pronunciada no citoplasma de neurônios de pequeno (10-20μm), médio (25-35μm), e grande 40-50μm) diâmetro dos 3 grupos experimentais. A manipulação e a secção do nervo ciático provocou aumento no número de núcleos imunorreativos de células de pequeno diâmetro. A densitometria óptica foi significativamente maior no citoplasma das células dos GRDs localizados ipsilateralmente quando comparada com aquela das células pertencentes aos GRDs localizados contralateralmente à lesão. Todavia, não houve diferenças estatisticamente significativa entre a imunorreatividade nuclear nos GRDs entre os 3 grupos experimentais. O número de células imunorreativas nestes gânglios não mostrou mudanças significativas nos 3 grupos experimentais. Na medula espinal, a imunorreatividade à proteína c-Fos ocorreu predominantemente em núcleos localizados nos campos terminais dorsal e ventral, na banda mediolateral, na região ventral medial do corno ventral e nos funículos lateral e ventral medial. Os neurônios motores sempre foram imunorreativos. A manipulação e a secção do nervo ciático resultaram em um acréscimo no número de núcleos imunorreativos localizados nos campos terminais dorsal e ventral, e banda mediolateral, sendo este aumento maior na região do campo terminal dorsal. As demais regiões não mostraram modificações significantes no padrão de imunorreatividade da proteína c-Fos. A expressão desta proteína não modificou significativamente nos 3 grupos experimentais. Estes resultados mostram que, em rãs, similar ao que ocorre em mamíferos, a ativação de fibras aferentes primárias ativam a proteína c-Fos. No entanto, diferente de mamíferos, esta proteína ocorre no citoplasma de células sensoriais. Assim, apesar das rãs constituírem excelentes modelos para o estudo do papel do c-Fos nos mecanismos da transmissão nociceptiva, os estudos futuros abordando esta questão deverão considerar esta particularidade das rãs.
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Studies in several laboratories have confirmed the anxiolytic potential of a wide range of 5-HT1A receptor antagonists in rats and mice, with recent evidence pointing to a postsynaptic site of action in the ventral hippocampus. It would, therefore, be predicted that blockade of 5-HT1A somatodendritic autoreceptors in the midbrain raphe nuclei should produce anxiogenic-like effects. To test this hypothesis, we investigated the effects of WAY-100635 microinfusions (0, 1.0 or 3.0 mug in 0.1 mul) into the dorsal (DRN) or median (MRN) raphe nuclei on behaviours displayed by male Swiss-Webster mice in the elevated plus-maze. As this test is sensitive to prior experience. The effects of intra-raphe infusions were examined both in maze-naive and maze-experienced subjects. Sessions, were videotaped and subsequently scored for conventional indices of anxiety (open arm avoidance) and locomotor activity (closed arm entries), as well as a range of ethological measures (e.g. risk assessment). In maze-naive mice, intra-MRN (but not intra-DRN) infusions of WAY-100635 (3.0 mug) increased open arm exploration and reduced risk assessment. Importantly, these effects could not be attributed to a general reduction in locomotor activity. A similar, though somewhat weaker, pattern of behavioural change was observed in maze-experienced animals. This unexpected anxiolytic effect of 5-HT1A autoreceptor blockade in the MRN cannot be accounted fur by a disinhibition of 5-HT release in forebrain targets (e.g. hippocampus and amygdala), where stimulation of postsynaptic 5-HT1A receptors enhances anxiety-like responses. However, as the MRN also projects to the periaqueductal gray matter (PAG), an area known to be sensitive to the anti-aversive effects or 5-HT, it is argued that present results may reflect increased 5-HT release at this crucial midbrain locus within the neural circuitry of defense. (C) 2002 Elsevier B.V. B.V. All rights reserved.
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The thalamus plays an important role in the sensorial processing information, in this particular case, the visual information. Several neuronal groups have been characterized as conductors and processors of important sensorial information to the cerebral cortex. The lateral geniculate complex is one to them, and appears as a group very studied once it is responsible, in almost all totality, for the processing of visual information. Among the nuclei that constitute the lateral geniculate complex we highlight the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus of the thalamus (DLG), the main thalamic relay for the visual information. This nucleus is located rostral and lateral to medial geniculate nucleus and ventral to thalamic pulvinar nucleus in most of the mammals. In the primates humans and non-humans, it presents as a laminate structure, arranged in layers, when observed in coronal sections. The objective of this work was to do a mapping of the retinal projections and a citoarchictetonic and neurochemical characterization of DLG in the marmoset (Callithrix jacchus), a New World primate. The retinal projections were traced by anterograde transport of subunit b of cholera toxin (CTb), the citoarchicteture was described by Nissl method, and to neurochemical characterization immunohistochemicals technical were used to examine the main neurotransmitters and neuroatives substances present in this neural center. In DGL of marmoset thalamus, in coronal sections labeled by Nissl method, was possible to visualize the division of this nucleus in four layers divided in two portions: magnocellular and parvocellular. The retinal projections were present being visualized fibers and terminals immunorreactives to CTb (IR-CTb) in the DLG ipsilateral and contralateral. And through the immunohistochemicals techniques was observed that DLG contain cells, fibers and/or terminals immunoreactives against neuronal nuclear protein, subunits of AMPA 15 glutamate receptors (GluR1, GluR2/3, GluR4), choline acetyltransferase, serotonin, glutamic acid decarboxylase, binding calcium proteins (calbindin, parvalbumin and calretinin), vasopressin, vasoactive intestinal polypeptide, and an astrocyte protein, glial fibrillary acidic protein.
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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
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Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)
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OBJECTIVE: To describe the most reliable insertion angle, corridor length and width to place a ventral transarticular atlantoaxial screw in miniature breed dogs. STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective CT imaging study. SAMPLE POPULATION: Cervical CT scans of toy breed dogs (n = 21). METHODS: Dogs were divided into 2 groups--group 1: no atlantoaxial abnormalities; group 2: atlantoaxial instability. Insertion angle in medial to lateral and ventral to dorsal direction was measured in group 1. Corridor length and width were measured in groups 1 and 2. Corridor width was measured at 3 points of the corridor. Each variable was measured 3 times and the mean used for statistical analysis. RESULTS: Mean +/- SD optimal transarticular atlantoaxial insertion angle was determined to be 40 +/- 1 degrees in medial to lateral direction from the midline and 20 +/- 1 degrees in ventral to dorsal direction from the floor of the neural canal of C2. Mean corridor length was 7 mm (range, 4.5-8.0 mm). Significant correlation was found between corridor length, body weight, and age. Mean bone corridor width ranged from 3 to 5 mm. Statistically significant differences were found between individuals, gender and measured side. CONCLUSIONS: Optimal placement of a transarticular screw for atlantoaxial joint stabilization is very demanding because the screw path corridor is very narrow.
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Although intervertebral disc herniation is a well-known disease in dogs, pain management for this condition has remained a challenge. The goal of the present study is to address the lack of information regarding the innervation of anatomical structures within the canine vertebral canal. Immunolabeling was performed with antibodies against protein gene product 9.5, Tuj-1 (neuron-specific class III β-tubulin), calcitonin gene-related peptide, and neuropeptide Y in combination with the lectin from Lycopersicon esculentum as a marker for blood vessels. Staining was indicative of both sensory and sympathetic fibers. Innervation density was the highest in lateral areas, intermediate in dorsal areas, and the lowest in ventral areas. In the dorsal longitudinal ligament (DLL), the highest innervation density was observed in the lateral regions. Innervation was lower at mid-vertebral levels than at intervertebral levels. The presence of sensory and sympathetic fibers in the canine dura and DLL suggests that pain may originate from both these structures. Due to these regional differences in sensory innervation patterns, trauma to intervertebral DLL and lateral dura is expected to be particularly painful. The results ought to provide a better basis for the assessment of medicinal and surgical procedures.