(1) Autopsy revealed a unique combination of neuropathological findings, namely 1) multiple neurilemmomas of the cauda equina with loss of nerve fibers in dorsal roots and Goll's tracts, 2) symmetric fiber loss in the lateral corticospinal tracts throughout the spinal cord, and 3) a cavernous hemangioma of the lower thoracic spinal cord.
(2) There was ascending degeneration of Goll's columns and descending degeneration of the lateral columns.
(3) The neurons of the Goll's and Burdach's nuclei have a richly ramified dendritic network.
(4) (Busch, W. A., Stromer, M. H., Goll, D. E., and Suzuki, A.
(5) In the spinal cord, there was myelin pallor in the posterior column predominant in Goll's fascicule and moderate atrophy of neurons in the anterior horn.
(6) Concerning Goll's tract in the lumbar area of the dorsal funiculus, faster maturation than in the thoracic and cervical areas can be seen.
(7) showed severe loss of Purkinje cells, sligth regressive changes in both dentate and olivary nuclei, nerve cells atrophy of anterior horn motoneurons, degeneration of Goll's and Burdach's spino-olivary and anterior spino-cerebellar tracts.
(8) A distinction is made between Goll's tract and Burdach's tract, and, furthermore, inside Goll's tract the cervical, thoracic and lumbar areas are compared.
(9) Thus the number of proteinase-sensitive regions in the myofibrils is greater than as previously reported by Dayton, Goll, Zeece, Robson & Reville [(1976) Biochemistry15, 2150-2158].
(10) Burdach's tract shows earlier and faster development of the myelin sheath than Goll's tract cervically, which leads to the conclusion that epicritical sensitivity matures earlier in the upper extremity.
(11) A comparison between Goll's and Burdach's tracts shows an earlier and faster growth of the axons in Burdach's tract.
(12) Pallor of Goll's tracts and axonal swelling in Goll's nuclei were also observed.
(13) In this case the spinocerebellar tracts were less involved than the lumbar spinal ganglia, as well as their distant axial continuation to Goll's tracts only at the cervical level and until the bulber nucleus gracilis.
(14) It has been found out that within Goll's tract a caudocranial maturation takes place.
(15) Highly purified alpha-actinin can be made by using the low ionic strength extraction procedure previously described (Arakawa N., Robson, R. M., and Goll, D. E. (1970) Biochim.
Golly
Definition:
Example Sentences:
(1) Golly; so riled is Abrams that he has committed a Hollywood solecism – you never tell anyone not to come.
(2) Helena Bonham Carter, one of the stars of the film, was seen to mouth “Oh golly” as the protesters jumped the barrier as she was walking the red carpet.
(3) The vote on Europe might not have been binding, but by golly it was important.
(4) As a general spirit, I'd accept the term "rock and roll" – but if we're talking about Good Golly Miss Molly then it couldn't possibly be further from us.
(5) It looks like the Starship Enterprise and costs an eye-watering £299, but by golly, it juices them brassicas good.
(6) When these books were published, 'jeepers' and 'golly gosh' was modern slang.
(7) You know, it wasn't, 'Golly, gee, them Commies are bad.'
(8) I remember after that thinking, 'Golly, how can I keep raising the game?'"
(9) "By golly, I just hate these unamerican [sic] shoes!"
(10) The first is this, the sort of companies that I understand don't sit there saying, 'by golly, we've got to be able to get rid of people, so therefore we mustn't invest because the risks are too high.'
(11) The New Vic continued the tradition of staging new work, including Chris Martin's 1988 adaptation of Longfellow's The Song of Hiawatha and Bob Eaton's musical Good Golly Miss Molly (1989), as well as classic repertory.
(12) Ordinarily I'd be elated – I'd been determined to find Hugh the perfect present, and, by golly, I had done it – but instead I felt unhinged, not by the things I had seen so much as by the taxidermist.