Longitudinal striae of Lancisi
Longitudinal striae of Lancisi | |
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Identifiers | |
Latin | stria longitudinalis medialis, stria longitudinalis lateralis |
TA |
A14.1.09.248 A14.1.09.247 |
FMA | 67956 |
In human neuroanatomy, the longitudinal striae of Lancisi (also "striae lancisi" or "nerves of Lancisi") are parts of the indusium griseum and represent bundles of fibers running along the corpus callosum of the brain. They were originally described by and are named after Italian physician, epidemiologist and anatomist Giovanni Maria Lancisi.[1] There striae are categorized as medial or lateral striae; the area between medial striae are a useful neurosurgical mark of the middle of the corpus callosum.
References
- ↑ Di Ieva, Antonio; Tschabitscher, Manfred, y Baena, Riccardo Rodriguez (1 March 2007). "LANCISI'S NERVES AND THE SEAT OF THE SOUL". Neurosurgery 60 (3): 563???568. doi:10.1227/01.NEU.0000249283.46514.93. Cite uses deprecated parameter
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