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31 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back
The intraparietal sulcus separates what?


The superior and inferior parietal lobules

Inferior parietal lobe is composed of


- The sylvian fissure terminates at?


- The superior temporal sulcus terminates at?






- Angular gyrus (The superior temporal gyrus terminates in this gyrus (Brodman area 39- Wernicke's area)




- Supramarginal gyrus (the sylvian fissure terminated in this gyrus - Brodman area 40 - Wernicke's area)

Brodmaan's areas 3,1,2 are the?

Primary somatosensory cortex (Post central gyrus - post central sulcus)
Brodmaan's areas 41 & 42 are the?

Primary auditory cortex (Transverse gyri of Heschl) (Superior temporal gyri)

Brodmaan's area 4 is the


Precentral gyrus - Primary motor cortex


Brodmaan's area 6 is the
Premotor area or supplementa motor area Immediately anterior to motor strip
Brodmaan's area 44 is the?
Broca's area (dominant hemisphere) In opercular region (inferior frontal gyrus)

Brodmaan´s area 17 is the?

Primary visual cortex

Brodmaan's areas 40 and 39 are the?

Wernicke's area (dominant hemisphere) (Supramarginal gyrus and angular gyrus)
The central sulcus when approaches the interhemispharic fissure, usually does not rich the midline it terminates in the? Just anterior to?
- Central sulcus terminates in the paracentral lobule. - Just anterior to the pars marginalis.

In the pterion which bones come together


4 bones:


- Frontal.


- Parietal.


- Temporal.


- Sphenoid (greater wing)


The asterion is in the union of which sutures


3 sutures:


- Lamboid suture


- Occipitomastoid


- Parietomastoid

In the skull lambda is?


The junction of:


The Sagital suture and the lamboid sutures.

What is the opisthion

The posterior margin of the foramen magnum in the midline

What is the bregma


The junction of coronal and sagital sutures


The superior sagital sinus usually localizes to which side of the sagital suture?

It usually localizes to the right of the sagital suture but never by more than 11 mm.
What is the fastigium


The fastigium is the apex of the 4th ventricle (highest point in the roof of the 4th ventricle).


What is the lenght of the 3th ventricle and the lenght of the 4th ventricle at the "fastigium"

3th ventricle ~2.8cm and the 4th ventricle at fastigium is ~ 1.4 cm

What goes through the Superior orbital fissure

- Movement of eye: CN III, IV and VI


- Ophtalmic nerve (CN V1) its three branches:


- Lacrimal nerve


- Frontal nerve


- Nasociliary nerve.


- Superior ophtalmic veins


- Sympathetic fibers from cavernous plexus

What goes through the Inferior orbital fissure

- Zygomatic nerve (branch of V2)


- Infraorbital artery, vein and nerve (b. of V2)


- Inferior ophtalmic vein


- Branches from pterygopalatine ganglion

What goes through the foramen lacerum


Nothing! ICA courses superior to it and this segment is called the lacerum segment.




In 30% hava the vidian artery.

What goes through the Carotid canal

- ICA


- Ascending sympathetic nerves.

What goes through the Internal acoustic meatus (aka porus acusticus)

- CN VII and CN VIII

What goes through the hypoglossal canal


- CN XII (hypoglosal).


- Meningeal branch of the ascending pharyngeal artery

What goes through the foramen magnun


Out:


- Spinal cord (medulla oblongata)


- CN XI (Spinal root of accesory nerve)


In:


- Vertebral arteries


- Anterior and posterior spinal arteries

What goes through the Optic canal

- CN II


- Ophtalmic artery


What goes through the foramen rotundum


- CN V2 (Maxillary division).


- Artery of foramen rotundum


What goes through the foramen ovale

- CN V3 (mandibular division)


- Lesser petrosal nerve


What goes through the foramen spinosum


- Middle meningeal artery and vein


- Meningeal branch of CN V3 (mandibular nerve)


What goes through the jugular foramen

- Internal jugular vein


- CN IX (glosopharyngeo), X and XI (accesory n.)

What goes through the Stylomastoid foramen


- CN VII


- Stylomastoid artery