ABSTRACT
Modifications of the selective silver impregnation methods of Nauta and Fink-Heimer are described. Both procedures were tested in wide variety of species: from reptiles to carnivores, as well as in human autoptic cases. The modified Nauta procedure is recommended as a method of choice for tracing axonal trajectories due to an improved impregnation selectivity of the degenerating axoplasm. Its use for the demonstration of monoaminergic (NA, DA, 5-HT) pathways, however, remains limited. The modified Fink-Heimer procedure demonstrates successfully the degeneration of axons, and especially--the thin preterminal arborizations, as well as the terminal boutons in many fiber systems studied, including the nigrostriatal, raphe-nigral, and coerulocortical tracts. Both methods provide an additional cytoarchitectonic orientation due to a counterstain of nerve cell bodies with cresylechtviolett.