The ganglions differ essentially from the brain in the early periods in their development, which is proportionably much less advanced than that of the brain. They are only on a level with all the other organs, whilst this is infinitely superior to them in this respect, as we have seen. By comparing the superior cervical, semilunar ganglions, &c. in the fœtus, and in the adult, it is easy to make this remark. The ganglions receive also less vessels in proportion than the brain. They do not follow the proportion of increase of the organs to which they send nerves. Thus those that furnish the genital organs, which are nearly nothing during the first years of general nutrition, are as large in proportion as those which go to the liver, the stomach, the intestines, which are characterized by an early increase. These nerves follow in this respect the same law as the ganglions, though the most are found upon the arteries, which are more or less developed according to the organs they penetrate.

The nervous system of organic life being less early in its development than that of animal life, should be subject in infancy to fewer affections; and this is what is observed. Convulsions, and most of the neuroses of the second, are, as we have seen, a peculiar appendage upon infancy. On the other hand, the particular order of nervous affections of which we have spoken, and in which it appears that the first takes the principal part, is generally less frequent at this period. All nervous diseases, whose peculiar seat seems to be at the epigastric region, in which there is so great an abundance of nerves coming from the ganglions, appear to be foreign to this age.

Another difference that distinguishes the ganglions from the brain as it respects development, is this, that in the fœtus, they are not, like it, of extreme softness. Their hardness is little inferior to what they afterwards possess in adult age.

In proportion as we advance from infancy, the organic nervous system begins to become predominant. It is towards the thirtieth or fortieth year that it appears at its maximum of action; it diminishes as we approach old age; it decays in part at this epoch. The nerves become greyish; the ganglions are hard, resisting and smaller. The neuroses that appear to belong to them are infinitely more rare. Moreover, the obscurity that rests upon the functions of this system, does not allow me to point out definitely the alterations they experience in the different ages.

V. Remarks upon the vertebral ganglions.

In all that I have said thus far upon the ganglions, I have not noticed those which correspond with the foramina through which the nerves pass, and which some call simple ganglions. We know that at the instant each nerve goes from each of these foramina, it exhibits an evident enlargement, reddish, pulpy, analogous in its appearance to most of the ganglions. I confess, that I know not how to class these organs. We cannot deny that they have the greatest analogy in structure to the others. They are approximated in another respect, which is this, that the nerves, in going from them, form almost immediately plexuses that we have designated under the names of cervical, brachial, lumbar, and sacral, in the same way as the solar, cardiac, mesenteric plexuses, &c. are formed by the nerves of organic life, at the moment they go from their respective ganglions. However, these last nerves are conductors of very different properties. Irritate in a living animal the superior cervical ganglion, the inferior even, which is more difficult, though it may be come at, the muscles to which they send nerves will remain unmoved; the same phenomenon takes place by exciting the nerves themselves. On the contrary, every irritation of a filament coming from the vertebral ganglions, produces immediately convulsions in the corresponding muscles. The sensibility is entirely different in the two species of nerves. Besides, there is no analogy between the manner in which the nerves go in all directions from the vertebral ganglions, and that in which the other ganglions furnish theirs. In the expectation that further experiments may elucidate the subject, let us content ourselves with pointing out what is the result of accurate observation.


ARTICLE SECOND.
OF THE NERVES OF ORGANIC LIFE.

I. Origin.

Each ganglion is, as we have seen, a centre from which go in different directions, various branches, the whole of which form a kind of little separate nervous system. The manner of the origin of these branches has but very little relation with that of the branches of the brain and of the spinal marrow. The following are some differences that distinguish it.