304 



PHYSIOLOGY 



CHAP. 



literature (Thorburn, Kocher, Gowers, Starr, Eclinger, Leyden, 

 Goldscheider, Striimpell, Jacob, etc.) a series of observations on 

 the segmental innervation of muscle whicb agree witb the fore- 

 going experimental and morphological facts. 



The main defect of Kocher's diagram, and also of that suggested 

 by the American neurologist Allen Starr, is in the nietameric 



FIG. 180. Metameric distribution or transverse segmentation of cutaneous areas <>f sensibility of 

 human body, drawn with the limbs in the position of their embryonic growth. (Diagram con- 

 structed by Luciani from Bolk's data.) The series of derma tomes which successively correspond 

 to the cervical, lumbar, and sacral roots is indicated by different degrees of shading. 



division of the limbs. Without giving sufficient attention to the 

 special character of the embryological development of the limbs, 

 they Starr more particularly represented the dermatomes as 

 running from the vertebral column to the limbs in uninterrupted 

 zones, narrow in the middle and somewhat expanded at the ends. 

 Bolk's schema, on the contrary, corresponds perfectly with our. 

 knowledge of the embryological development of the limbs. The 

 arrangement of the der-matomes in the upper limb (Fig. 180) is in 

 the following order in the cranio-caudal direction : shoulder, outer 



