What is A Large Mass Lesion seen in the retrocrural area and anterior T11 and T12 vertebral bodies.
corpus callosum
a large portion of the brain, serving to coordinate voluntary movements, posture, and balance in humans, being in back of and below the cerebrum and consisting of two lateral lobes and a central lobe.
The part of the brain that contains two hemispheres connected by the vermis is the cerebellum. The cerebellum is responsible for coordinating voluntary movements, balance, and motor control. The vermis serves as the central part of the cerebellum, linking the two hemispheres and playing a role in posture and locomotion.
The innermost layer consists of white matter (W). These are the nerve fibers carrying information in and out of the cerebellum. The outermost layer of the cerebellum is called the molecular layer. This is where the fibers from different nerve cells communicate with each other. Purkinje cells are row of large cells that are lined up at the border between the two outer layers of the cerebellum.
The vermis is considered the oldest part of the cerebellum, evolutionarily speaking. It plays a vital role in controlling posture and balance.
It is the cerebellar vermis.
corpus callosum
vermis
a large portion of the brain, serving to coordinate voluntary movements, posture, and balance in humans, being in back of and below the cerebrum and consisting of two lateral lobes and a central lobe.
There are quite a number of synonyms for the word vermis. The common ones are vermis cerebella and neural structure. The vermis is the narrow central part of the cerebellum.
Count Otto Vermis was created in 1977.
vermis
The pons connects the cerebrum to the cerebellum. The cerebellum is responsible for the motor control in the brain.
De Vermis Mysteriis - album - was created on 2012-04-03.
the vermis
Cerebellum
Hans von Chiari, Professor of Morbid Anatomy at Charles University in Prague, 1891 published a his findings describing three cases with malformations of the lower part of the cerebellum and brain stem. type I, II, and III. These were later, named the Chiari malformations in his honor. In the Chiari malformation Type I (the cerebellar tonsils herniate down into the upper cervical spinal canal with the lower brain stem sometimes hanging down into the spinal canal. Type II has the lower brain stem, cerebellar vermis, and tonsils hanging down below the foramen magnum. Type III malformation has the tissues of the posterior fossa displaced into a soft sac (meningocele) at the back of the head and upper neck.