Posterior fossa

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Posterior fossa Gerhard van der Westhuizen Medical officer (3 Military Hosp) Department of Radiology

description

Posterior fossa. Gerhard van der Westhuizen Medical officer (3 Military Hosp) Department of Radiology. Posterior fossa - Outline. Calvarium Posterior skull base Brainstem anteriorly Midbrain, pons and medulla Cerebellum posteriorly 2 Hemispheres and midline vermis Divided into: - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Posterior fossa

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Posterior fossaGerhard van der WesthuizenMedical officer (3 Military Hosp)Department of Radiology

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Posterior fossa - Outline• Calvarium

▫Posterior skull base• Brainstem anteriorly

▫Midbrain, pons and medulla• Cerebellum posteriorly

▫2 Hemispheres and midline vermis• Divided into:

▫Mesencephalon (midbrain)▫Rhomboencephalon (pons, medulla and cerebellum)

• Cerebral aquaduct and fourth ventricle• CSF cisterns containing vertebrobasilar arteries and

veins

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Posterior skull base• Formed by posterior temporal and occipital

bones• Anterior - Dorsum sellae medially, petrous ridges

laterally• Posterior - Groove for transverse sinus on

occipital bone• Transmits CN 7-12, medulla oblangata and

jugular veins• Multiple foramina and fissures

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Posterior skull base -Foramina• Internal acoustic meatus

▫ Porus acusticus – CN VII & VIII, labyrinthine artery• Jugular foramen

▫ Pars nervosa - anteromedial CN IX, Jacobson’s nerve and inferior petrosal sinus

▫ Pars vascularis - posterolateral Jugular bulb, CN X & XI, Arnold’s nerve, posterior meningeal

artery, meningeal branch of ascending pharyngeal artery• Hypoglossal canal

▫ CN XII• Stylomastoid foramen

▫ CN VII• Foramen magnum

▫ Medulla oblangata, CN XI and vertebral arteries

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Brainstem and cerebellum

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Brainstem•Midbrain

▫Connects pons and cerebellum with forebrain

•Pons ▫Relays information from brain to

cerebellum•Medulla

▫Relays information from spinal cord to brain

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Midbrain (Mesenchephalon)• “Butterfly-shaped”, passes through tentorium cerebelli

• 3 Main parts:▫ Cerebral peduncles

White matter tracts - Corticospinal, corticobulbar & corticopontine tracts

▫ Tegmentum CN nuclei: III – Level of superior colliculus;

IV – Level of inferior colliculus Accessory oculomotor (Edinger-Westphal)

Gray matter nuclei Substantia nigra - Motor planning, eye movement, reward seeking, learning and

addiction Red nucleus – Relay and control centre of cortiomotor impulses. Periaquaductal gray matter – Pain and defensive behaviour

White matter tracts Spinothalamic Medial and lateral lemniscus Somatosensory Medial longitudinal fasciculus – Vestibulo-ocular and optokinetic reflexes

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Midbrain▫ Tectum

Superior colliculus ( visual pathway) Inferior colliculus (auditory pathway)

Cerebral aquaduct passes between tectum and tegmentum

CSF cisterns associated with midbrain Ambient – Lateral, CN IV Quadrigeminal – Posterior, CN IV Interpeduncular – Anterior, CN III.

Connections: Superior – Cerebral hemispheres, basal ganglia and thalami Posterior – Cerebellum via superior cerebellar peduncle (brachium conjuntivum) Inferior – Pons

Blood supply via vertebrobasilar circulation Perforating branches of basilar, SCA, PCA.

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Axial T2

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Axial T2

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Axial T2

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Axial T2

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Axial T1

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Pons•Relays info from brain to cerebellum.•Middle cerebellar peduncle – Brachium pontis•Bulbous midportion of brainstem•Two main parts:

▫Ventral pons – White matter tracts continuous with cerebral peduncles and medullary pyramids.

▫Dorsal tegmentum– CN nuclei, gray matter nuclei and white matter tracts. Continuation of midbrain tegmentum superiorly and medullary tegmentum inferiorly.

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Pons•Tranverse fibres make up bulk•Dorsal surface forms rostral half of 4th

ventricle.•Adjacent CSF cisterns:

▫Prepontine – CN V & VI ▫CP angle – CN VII & VIII

•Blood supply▫Medial branches SCA, perforating branches

of basilar artery, thalamoperforator arteries.

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Pons• CN nuclei:

▫ V – Throughout brainstem and upper cord. Bulk of motor and sensory in pons. Enters and exits at level of midlateral pons

▫ VI – In pontine tegmentum, near midline, anterior to fourth ventricle. Exits anterior at ponto-medullary junction

▫ VII – Ventrolateral aspect of pons Motor, superior salivatory, solitary tract Exits laterally at ponto-medullary junction

VIII – Vestibular along floor of 4th ventricle Cochlear on lateral surface of inferior cerebellar peduncle

Exits at ponto-medullary junction, posterior to VII

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Axial T1

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Axial T1

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Axial T2

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Axial T2

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Axial T2

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Axial T2

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Axial T2

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Cor T2

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CPA

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IAM

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IAM

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Medulla• Caudal part of brainstem composed of gray

matter formations, CN nuclei IX – XII and white matter tracts.

• Between pons and spinal cord.• 4th ventricle and cerebellum posteriorly• Connected to cerebellum via inferior cerebellar

peduncle (restiform body).• 2 Main parts:

▫Ventral – olive and pyramidal tract▫Dorsal tegmentum – CN nuclei and white matter

tracts

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Medulla•Ventral medulla:

•Pyramid▫Paired; anterior surface; midline ventral median

fissure▫Ipsilateral corticospinal tracts prior to

decussation•Olive

▫Lateral to pyramids, venterolateral sulcus (pre-olivary) and posterolateral sulcus (post-olivary)

▫Inferior olivary complex of nuclei

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Medulla• Dorsal tegmentum:

• Multiple white matter tracts.• Gracile and cuneate tubercles

▫Lower aspect of dorsal medulla▫Nuclei gracilis(medial) ; cuneatus (lateral)

• Fourth ventricle terminates in caudal medulla.• Blood supply:

▫Distal vertebral arteries▫PICA ▫Anterior spinal artery

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Medulla• CN nuclei:

▫ IX – Upper and mid medulla (nucleus ambiguus, solitary tract nucleus and inferior salivatory nucleus.

Exits medulla in postolivary sulcus above X

▫ X – Upper and mid medulla (nucleus ambiguus, solitary tract and dorsal vagal nucleus)

Exits postolivary sulcus between IX and XI

▫ XI – Lower nucleus ambiguus and spinal nucleus Exits postolivary sulcus inferior to X

▫ XII – Mid medulla, hypoglossal eminence in 4th ventricle

Exits anterior medulla in pre-olivary sulcus

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Axial T2

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Axial T2

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Axial T2

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Axial T2

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Cerebellum•Function: Integrates coordination and fine-

tuning of movement and regulation of muscle tone.

•2 Hemispheres and midline vermis•Three surfaces – superior,inferior and anterior•Divided into 3 lobes and 9 lobules by

transverse fissures.•3 Cerebellar peduncles•Cortical gray matter, central white matter and

4 paired deep gray nuclei.

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Cerebellum•Adjacent CSF cisterns

▫CPA cistern▫Cisterna magna▫Quadrigeminal plate cistern▫Superior cerebellar cistern

•Blood supply▫SCA▫AICA▫PICA

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Cerebellum – Lobes and lobules• 2 Hemispheres seperated by shallow median groove

superiorly and deep grove inferiorly.• Midline posterior cerebellar notch lodges the falx cerebelli.• Devided into lobules by fissures

▫ Horizontal fissure – Deepest, divides into sup & inf vermis.▫ Primary fissure – Divides superior surface, small anterior

lobe and larger posterior lobe.▫ Posterolateral fissure – Between posterior lobe and flocculo-

nodular lobe.• 3 Lobes with 9 lobules:

▫ Anterior – Lingula, central lobule, culmen▫ Posterior – Declive, folium, tuber, pyramid, uvula▫ Flocculo-nodular – Nodule

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Cerebellum – Lobes and lobules

Vermis lobules Associated hemispheric lobulesSuperior vermis:Lingula Wing of lingulaCentral lobule Wing of central lobule

Anterior Culmen Quadrangular lobule

lobe Primary fissureDeclive Simple lobuleFolium Superior semilunar lobule Horizontal fissure

Inferior vermis: Posterior

Tuber Inferior semilunar lobule lobe

Pyramid Biventral lobuleUvula Tonsils Posterolateral (dorsolateral) fissure Nodule Flocculus Flocculo-nodular

lobe

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Lobules

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“Like cats catch dogs for the party up north”

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Deep cerebellar nuclei• Fastigial :

▫ Medial group (vermis)▫ Antigravity muscle groups

• Globose: ▫ Posterior intermediate group Ipsilateral

• Emboliform: motor activity▫ Anterior intermediate group (Rubrospinal)

• Dentate: Lateral group, largest nucleus▫ Ipsilateral motor activity (Corticospinal)

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Deep cerebellar nuclei

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Sag T2

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Sag T2

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Sag T2

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Cor T2

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Cor T2

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Cor T2

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Axial T1

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Axial T1

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Axial T1

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Axial T1

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Arterial supply – Vertebrobasilar system•V4 segments of bilateral vertebral

arteries enters through foramen magnum.•Courses superomedially posterior to

clivus•Unites – forms basilar artery.•Terminates into 2 posterior cerebral

arteries in interpeduncular/suprasellar cistern above dorsum sellae

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Arterial supply – Vertebrobasilar system• Branches:

▫ Vertebral artery segment V4 Meningeal branch Anterior and posterior spinal arteries Perforating branches to medulla PICA (largest branch)

Lateral, hemispheric branches, inferior vermian artery▫ Basilar

Pontine and midbrain perforating branches Labyrinthine artery AICA

Lateral and medial branches. SCA

Perforating, marginal and hemispheric branches, superior vermian artery▫ PCA’s

Terminal branches of BA. Perforating – Posterior thalamoperforating, thalamogeniculate Choroidal – Medial posterior, lateral posterior Cortical branches – Anterior & posterior temporal Two terminal trunks - Medial: Medial occipital, parieto-occipital, calcarine, posterior

splenial - Lateral: Lateral occipital, temporal

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Variants- Persistent trigeminal artery

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Variants – Persistent hypoglossal artery

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Variants – Proatlantal intersegmental artery

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Venous drainage• Three major drainage systems:

▫ Superior (galenic) group Drains into vein of Galen, 3 major veins Precentral cerebellar – single, between lingula and central lobule Superior vermian – originates near declive, course superiorly

over culmen Anterior pontomesencephalic – anterior to pons and midbrain; in

relation to basilar artery▫ Anterior (petrosal) group

Petrosal vein – in CPA, tributaries from cerebellum, pons and medulla

▫ Posterior (tentorial) group Inferior vermian veins – Paired, paramedian. Curves

posterosuperiorly under pyramids and uvula

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References • Netter, F.H. (2011). Atlas of Human Anatomy,

5th ed. Philadelphia: Saunders Elsevier• Ryan, S., McNicholas, M., Eustace, S. (2011).

Anatomy for diagnostic imaging, 3rd ed. London: Saunders Elsevier

• Butler, P., Mitchell, A.W.M., Ellis, H. (1999). Applied Radiological Anatomy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press

• Harnsberger,H.R., Osborn, A.G., (2006). Imaging anatomy – Brain, head and neck, spine, 1st ed. Utah: Amirsys