Literature DB >> 2106226

The cerebellum: 3. Anatomic-MR correlation in the coronal plane.

G A Press1, J W Murakami, E Courchesne, M Grafe, J R Hesselink.   

Abstract

Thin (5-mm) coronal high-field (1.5-T) MR images of four human brain specimens and 14 normal volunteers were correlated with myelin-stained microtomic sections of the specimen cerebella. The primary white-matter tracts innervating several hemispheric (posterior quadrangular, superior, and inferior semilunar, gracile, biventer, tonsil) and vermian (declive, folium, tuber) lobules are oriented perpendicularly to the coronal plane of section and are shown well on proton-density-weighted (long TR/short TE) and T2-weighted (long TR/long TE) spin-echo images, which provide excellent contrast between gray and white matter. Several of the surface sulci and fissures of the cerebellar hemispheres (including the superior posterior, horizontal, secondary, and posterolateral fissures) also course perpendicular to the coronal plane and are depicted well on T1-weighted (short TR/short TE) and T2-weighted images, which maximize contrast between CSF and parenchyma. The opportunity for side-to-side comparison of the hemispheres is a distinct advantage of the coronal view. Nevertheless, more obliquely oriented surfaces (preculminate, primary, inferior posterior, inferior anterior, and intrabiventral fissures) and deep hemispheric structures (primary white-matter tracts to central, anterior quadrangular, and floccular lobules) may be obscured by volume-averaging in the coronal plane; moreover, much of the finer anatomy of the vermis is depicted poorly. The constant surface and deep anatomy of the cerebellum revealed on coronal images in normal volunteers encourages detailed mapping. MR imaging in the coronal plane should be especially useful in identifying, localizing, and quantifying normal and abnormal morphologic differences between the cerebellar hemispheres.

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Year:  1990        PMID: 2106226     DOI: 10.2214/ajr.154.3.2106226

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  AJR Am J Roentgenol        ISSN: 0361-803X            Impact factor:   3.959


  6 in total

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Authors:  J J Levitt; R W McCarley; P G Nestor; C Petrescu; R Donnino; Y Hirayasu; R Kikinis; F A Jolesz; M E Shenton
Journal:  Am J Psychiatry       Date:  1999-07       Impact factor: 18.112

2.  Lobular patterns of cerebellar activation in verbal working-memory and finger-tapping tasks as revealed by functional MRI.

Authors:  J E Desmond; J D Gabrieli; A D Wagner; B L Ginier; G H Glover
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  1997-12-15       Impact factor: 6.167

3.  Cerebellar atrophy in human and murine succinic semialdehyde dehydrogenase deficiency.

Authors:  Maria T Acosta; Jeeva Munasinghe; Phillip L Pearl; Maneesh Gupta; Andrey Finegersh; K Michael Gibson; William H Theodore
Journal:  J Child Neurol       Date:  2010-05-05       Impact factor: 1.987

4.  Vermian agenesis without posterior fossa cyst.

Authors:  C Adamsbaum; V Moreau; C Bulteau; J Burstyn; F Lair Milan; G Kalifa
Journal:  Pediatr Radiol       Date:  1994

5.  Subtotal agenesis of the cerebellum in an adult. MRI demonstration.

Authors:  R N Sener; J R Jinkins
Journal:  Neuroradiology       Date:  1993       Impact factor: 2.804

6.  Dissecting the pathobiology of altered MRI signal in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: A post mortem whole brain sampling strategy for the integration of ultra-high-field MRI and quantitative neuropathology.

Authors:  Menuka Pallebage-Gamarallage; Sean Foxley; Ricarda A L Menke; Istvan N Huszar; Mark Jenkinson; Benjamin C Tendler; Chaoyue Wang; Saad Jbabdi; Martin R Turner; Karla L Miller; Olaf Ansorge
Journal:  BMC Neurosci       Date:  2018-03-13       Impact factor: 3.288

  6 in total

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