The stria terminalis (or terminal stria) is a structure in the brain consisting of a band of fibers running along the lateral margin of the ventricular surface of the thalamus. Serving as a major output pathway of the amygdala, the stria terminalis runs from its centromedial division to the ventromedial nucleus of the hypothalamus.
The stria terminalis extends from the region of the interventricular foramina to the temporal horn of the lateral ventricle, carrying fibers from the amygdala to the septal nuclei, hypothalamus, and thalamic areas of the brain. It also carries fibers projecting from these areas back to the amygdala.
This nucleus is known to project inhibitory fibers to the lateral hypothalamus and participate in the control of feeding in rodents. Optogenetics activation of this inhibitory pathway rapidly produced voracious feeding behavior in well-fed mice and optogenetic inhibition of this pathway reduces food intake even in starved animals.
Derangement of opioid signaling in the BNST appears to mediate chronic alcohol-induced changes in stress response.
Hormone replacement therapy has been shown to influence hypothalamic size, even though the study tried to do this by including non-transsexual male and female controls which, for a variety of medical reasons, had experienced hormone reversal. The neurobiological basis of gender has been questioned in a follow-up study by the same group which found that the sexual dimorphism of the BSTc is not significant until adulthood (approximately 22 years of age) even though epidemiological studies show much earlier presentation of gender issues.
Since somatostatin-expressing neurons typically block dendritic inputs to the postsynaptic neuron, thus inhibiting signals traveling through associated structures, it is believed that the larger bed nucleus of the stria terminalis found in men (including transgender men) reduce the startle response in men and may be responsible for the higher incidence of specific phobias in women, and a possible source for the stereotype of women being afraid of mice.
Oxytocin receptor activity in the BNST is important for social recognition in rats. Both male and female rats that received a microinjection of oxytocin receptor antagonist had lower social recognition scores than rats that received a vehicle injection, and microinjections of oxytocin into the BNST enhanced social memory in male, but not female, rats.
Reduction to the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis has been observed in pedophilia diagnosed patients, in addition to reductions in the right amygdala, hypothalamus and abnormalities in related structures. The authors suggest reductions in the BNST are not specific to pedophilia, and are a general feature of abnormal sexual development
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