| Literature DB >> 26331053 |
Marinella Coco1, Vincenzo Perciavalle1.
Abstract
Until the end of 18th century, the role of the cerebellum remained obscure. The turning point occurred when Luigi Galvani showed that muscle contraction is due to electricity and Alessandro Volta produced the battery, an apparatus based on the pairing of silver and zinc plates separated by brine soaked paper disks, capable to generate electricity. Luigi Rolando, at beginning of 19th century, was impressed by these two observations. He thought that, since the brain generates the movement, it must contain a device generating electricity. As a battery, it should be formed by overlapping disks and the cerebellum for Rolando seemed to be the right structure for such a characteristic laminar organization. He argued that, if the cerebellum is the battery that produces electricity for muscle activity, its removal would produce paralysis. Consequently, Rolando removed the cerebellum in a young goat and observed that the animal, before dying, could no longer stand up. He concluded that the cerebellum is a motor structure as it generates the electricity which produces the movement. The conclusions of Rolando were criticized by Marie-Jean-Pierre Flourens who observed that animals undergoing cerebellectomy were still able to move, even if with problems of balance. Flourens concluded that the role of the cerebellum "is to put in order or to coordinate movements wanted by certain parts of the nervous system, excited by others". It was necessary to wait up to 1891 when Luigi Luciani, observing a dog survived the cerebellectomy, described a triad of symptoms (asthenia, atony and astasis), unquestionably of cerebellar origin.Entities:
Keywords: Cerebellum; History; Motor control
Year: 2015 PMID: 26331053 PMCID: PMC4552144 DOI: 10.1186/s40673-015-0029-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cerebellum Ataxias ISSN: 2053-8871
Fig. 1Luigi Galvani observed that the spasms of frog’s muscles occurred when he hooked the frog onto a metal railing (from http://ppp.unipv.it/Volta/Pages/ePage1.html)
Fig. 2Column battery from the letter of Alessandro Volta to Sir Joseph Banks [4]
Fig. 3Luigi Rolando (particular of the paint of Pasquale Baroni in the Museum of Anatomy of the University of Turin)
Fig. 4Marie-Jean-Pierre Flourens
Fig. 5Drawing of Purkinje cells (a) and granule cells (b) from pigeon cerebellum by Santiago Ramón y Cajal. Instituto Santiago Ramón y Cajal, Madrid, Spain
Major contributions to the current knowledge of the cerebellum
| Year | Author | Contribution |
|---|---|---|
| 1809 | Luigi Rolando | The cerebellum is the battery that produces the electricity necessary for generating muscular contraction |
| 1824 | Marie-Jean-Pierre Flourens | The role of the cerebellum is not that of generating the movement but to regulate it |
| 1891 | Luigi Luciani | Description, in a dog survived the cerebellectomy, of a triad of symptoms (asthenia, atony and astasis) unquestionably of cerebellar origin |
| 1894 | Santiago Ramón y Cajal | Publication of the first modern textbook of neuroanatomy with a clear description of the cerebellar cortex. |
| 1922 | Gordon Morgan Holmes | Systematic description of the symptoms of cerebellar lesions in man |
| 1967 | John C. Eccles, Masao Ito, and János Szentágothai | Book: The Cerebellum as a Neuronal Machine |
| 1969 | David C. Marr | Hypothesis about cerebellum and motor learning: A theory of cerebellar cortex |
| 1971 | James S. Albus | Hypothesis about cerebellum and motor learning: A theory of cerebellar function |
| 1974 | Gary I. Allen and Nakaakira Tsukahara | Review: Cerebrocerebellar communication systems |
| 1982 | Masao Ito and Masanobu Kano | Description in the cerebellum of the Long Term Depression |
| 1998 | Jeremy D. Schmahmann | Description of the Cerebellar Cognitive Affective Syndrome |