What's the difference between chiasma and chiasmus?

Chiasma


Definition:

  • (n.) A commissure; especially, the optic commissure, or crucial union of the optic nerves.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) For the case described by the author primary tearing of the chiasma due to sudden applanation of the skull in the frontal region with burstfractures in the anterior cranial fossa is assumed.
  • (2) There were, however, significant differences among investigators in reported mean chiasma frequencies.
  • (3) In only one case was the B chromosome significantly associated with an increase chiasma frequency.
  • (4) Chromosomal analysis of cells undergoing diakinesis showed significantly lower chiasma frequency in elderly men, compared with a group of younger control males and also with infertile males.
  • (5) Furthermore we found increased chiasma frequencies in diakinesis--metaphase I (MI) and reduced nondisjunction frequencies at anaphse I as a result of the treatments applied.
  • (6) A case of cystic optic glioma involving chiasma and bilateral posterior optic pathway was reported.
  • (7) CT revealed a calcified lesion which must be a vessel in the chiasma cistern just adjacent to the basilar artery which was relatively larger than normal.
  • (8) In the unanaesthetised animals the proportions of units responding were high (60%) and did not differ significantly between regions for each type of stimulation investigated: visual, auditory and optic chiasma shocks.
  • (9) Tangential, centrifugal and incerta sedis-fibres, which originate either from cell bodies in the cell body layer at the periphery of the outer chiasma or more centrally, terminate in the synaptic region of the lamina.
  • (10) This new function is derived by assuming that all chromosome arms except the short arms of acrocentric chromosomes hav an obligatory chiasma, and that the remaining chiasmata are distributed at random; assumptions which may correspond reasonably well to reality.
  • (11) Thus from just beyond the chiasma the fibres had already achieved the major uniaxial rearrangement necessary to establish a normal tract distribution despite the eye translocation.
  • (12) Pathologically there was necrosis of the optic chiasma and focal areas of myelin sheath vacuolation or demyelination in certain areas of the brain, especially in the cerebellar peduncles.
  • (13) Predictions from the chiasma map can be confirmed or refuted only by genetic evidence for which the estimates of this paper serve as initial values to begin maximum likelihood iteration.
  • (14) Male meiosis in Mesostoma ehrenbergii ehrenbergii (2x = 10) is characterized by extreme restriction of chiasma formation; 3 pairs of chromosomes form bivalents at metaphase I which are associated by single very distally localized chiasma, while two pairs of chromosomes remain as unpaired univalents.
  • (15) It was found that both of the heat-induced decreases in chiasma frequency which can be obtained (Effects 2 and 3), were dominant over both of the different types of increase (Effects 1 and 4), with the largest decrease (Effect 3) being dominant over all others.
  • (16) In precocious puberty we found 1 ectopic pinealoma and 2 gliomas of the chiasma.
  • (17) The latter refers to the Willis atypical polygons, which determine important atipies in the topographical distribution of the chiasma's arteries and optical bandelets.
  • (18) In the rostral third of the SCN there are relatively few optic synapses which are found close to the optic chiasma.
  • (19) In addition to this abnormality there is a misrouting of the optic nerve fibers, with some fibers from the temporal retina following a crossed route at the chiasma and terminating in the contralateral cortical hemisphere.
  • (20) The chiasma frequency estimates were based on 15 son-sire pairs, the translocation heterozygotes being maintained in a Swiss random-bred genetic background.

Chiasmus


Definition:

  • (n.) An inversion of the order of words or phrases, when repeated or subsequently referred to in a sentence

Example Sentences:

  • (1) But doing so has never been as simple or as uncontested as his neatly balanced chiasmus implies.

Words possibly related to "chiasmus"