Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 November 2024
The locus coeruleus is a nucleus located in the dorsorostral pons and functions primarily to produce norepinephrine/noradrenaline. It is also called nucleus pigmentosus pontis, discovered by Felix Vicq-d’Azyr in the 1700s and gets its name from Latin, meaning “blue spot,” with the Latin ceruleus meaning “of or pertaining to the sea or sky,” that is, blue, and locus meaning “place,” as unstained brain tissue appears to have a blue or azure hue.
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