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The neck extends from the base of the cranium and the inferior border of the mandible to the thoracic inlet. Skin The skin in the neck is normally under tension. Lines of greatest tension have been termed ‘relaxed skin tension…
The skull is the bony skeleton of the head. It houses the brain, the organs of special sense, and the upper parts of the respiratory and digestive systems and provides attachments for many of the muscles of the head and…
Skin and Fascia Face and scalp The superficial fascia of the scalp is firm, dense, fibroadipose, and closely adherent to the skin and to the underlying muscle, epicranius and the epicranial aponeurosis. Posteriorly, the fascia is continuous with the superficial…
The comparative anatomy of the long, corticofugal pathways from cortex to subcortical structures is important because we can interpret the key features of these pathways in humans on the basis of their similarities and differences when compared with other animals.…
The cerebral hemispheres are the largest part of the human brain: they consist of the telencephalon (cerebral cortex and underlying white matter), basal ganglia and diencephalon. Both hemispheres are interconnected by the corpus callosum and the anterior commissure. The cerebral…
The term basal ganglia is used to denote a number of subcortical nuclear masses that lie in the inferior part of the cerebral hemisphere, in close relationship with the internal capsule ( Fig. 31.1 ). The traditional definition of the…
The diencephalon is part of the prosencephalon (forebrain), which develops from the most rostral primary cerebral vesicle that differentiates into the caudal diencephalon and the rostral telencephalon. The cerebral hemispheres, containing the lateral ventricles, develop from the telencephalon. The sites…
The cerebellum is the largest part of the hindbrain, recognized as a distinct division of the brain from the time of Herophilus (335–280 BC) and Galen (AD 131–200). It is situated in the posterior cranial fossa, beneath the tentorium cerebelli,…
The brainstem is situated in the posterior cranial fossa, where it faces the clivus and dorsum sellae ventrally and the cisterna magna, fourth ventricle and cerebellum dorsally ( Fig. 28.1 ). It is approximately 6–7.5 cm in length and 3–4…
The spinal cord provides innervation for the trunk and limbs via spinal nerves and their peripheral ramifications. It receives primary afferent fibres from peripheral receptors located in widespread somatic and visceral structures, and sends motor axons to skeletal muscle. It…