Internal capsule

The internal capsule is a white matter structure situated in the inferomedial part of each cerebral hemisphere of the brain. It carries information past the basal ganglia, separating the caudate nucleus and the thalamus from the putamen and the globus pallidus. The internal capsule contains both ascending and descending axons, going to and coming from the cerebral cortex. It also separates the caudate nucleus and the putamen in the dorsal striatum, a brain region involved in motor and reward pathways.

Internal capsule
Horizontal section of right cerebral hemisphere. (Capsula interna labeled at upper left.)
The motor tract.
Details
Identifiers
Latincapsula interna
MeSHD020772
NeuroNames198
NeuroLex IDbirnlex_1659
TA98A14.1.09.524
TA25576
FMA61950
Anatomical terms of neuroanatomy

The corticospinal tract constitutes a large part of the internal capsule, carrying motor information from the primary motor cortex to the lower motor neurons in the spinal cord. Above the basal ganglia the corticospinal tract is a part of the corona radiata. Below the basal ganglia the tract is called cerebral crus (a part of the cerebral peduncle) and below the pons it is referred to as the corticospinal tract.[1][2]

Structure

The internal capsule consists of three parts and is V-shaped when cut horizontally, in a transverse plane.

  • the bend in the V is called the genu
  • the anterior limb or crus anterius is the part in front of the genu, between the head of the caudate nucleus and the lenticular nucleus
  • the posterior limb or crus posterius is the part behind the genu, between the thalamus and lenticular nucleus
  • the retrolenticular portion is caudal to the lenticular nucleus and carries the optic radiation (from medial part of lateral geniculate nucleus) also known as the geniculocalcarine tract. The fiber from lateral part of lateral geniculate nucleus is carried through the retrolenticular portion.
  • the sublenticular portion is beneath the lenticular nucleus and are tracts involved in the auditory pathway from the medial geniculate nucleus to the primary auditory cortex (Brodmann areas 41 and 42)

Genu

The genu is the flexure of the internal capsule. It is formed by fibers from the corticonuclear tracts. The fibers in this region are named the geniculate fibers; they originate in the motor part of the cerebral cortex and after passing downward through the base of the cerebral peduncle with the cerebrospinal fibers, undergo decussation and end in the motor nuclei of the cranial nerves of the opposite side. It contains the corticobulbar tract, which carries upper motor neurons from the motor cortex to cranial nerve nuclei that mainly govern motion of striated muscle in the head and face.

Anterior limb

The anterior limb of internal capsule (or frontal part) is situated between the lentiform nucleus and the caudate nucleus.[3] It contains:

  1. thalamocortical fibers (passing from the lateral thalamic nuclei to the frontal lobe)[3]
  2. corticothalamic fibres (passing from frontal lobe to the lateral thalamic nuclei)[3]
  3. fibers connecting the caudate nucleus to the putamen (these fibres are transversely oriented)[3]
  4. fibers connecting the cortex with the corpus striatum
  5. frontopontine fibers[3] (passing from the frontal lobe through the medial fifth of the base of the cerebral peduncle to the nuclei pontis)
  6. thalamic pontine fibers

Posterior limb

The posterior limb of internal capsule (or occipital part) is the portion of the internal capsule posterior to the genu. It is situated between the thalamus and the lentiform nucleus.[3]

The anterior half of the posterior limb contains fibers of the corticospinal tract and corticobulbar tract (in an anteroposterior somatotropic arrangement), as well as corticorubral fibres (passing from the frontal lobe to the red nucleus) that accompany the corticospinal tract.[3]

The posterior third of the posterior limb contains:

  1. third-order sensory neurons passing from the posterolateral nucleus of thalamus to the postcentral gyrus (in an anteroposterior somatotropic arrangement)[3]
  2. the fibers of optic radiation, from the lower visual centers to the cortex of the occipital lobe;
  3. acoustic fibers, from the lateral lemniscus to the temporal lobe
  4. fibers that pass from the occipital and temporal lobes to the pontine nuclei

Blood supply

The superior parts of both the anterior and posterior limbs and the genu of the internal capsule are supplied by the lenticulostriate arteries, which are branches of the M1 segment of the middle cerebral artery.

The inferior half of the anterior limb is supplied via the recurrent artery of Heubner, which is a branch of the anterior cerebral artery.

The inferior half of the posterior limb is supplied by the anterior choroidal artery, which is a branch of the internal carotid artery.

In summary, the blood supply of the internal capsule is

As in many parts of the body, some degree of variation in the blood supply exists. For example, thalamoperforator arteries, which are branches of the basilar artery, occasionally supply the inferior half of the posterior limb.

Function

The internal capsule provides passage to ascending and descending fibres running to and from the cerebral cortex.[4]

Working anterior to posterior:

  • The anterior limb of the internal capsule contains:
1) Frontopontine fibers project from frontal cortex to the pons;
2) Thalamocortical radiations are the fibers that connect the medial and anterior nuclei of the thalamus to the frontal lobes (these are severed during a prefrontal lobotomy).

Other fibers within the internal capsule:

Pathophysiology

Dynamics of blood supply

The lenticulostriate arteries supply a substantial amount of the internal capsule. These small vessels are particularly vulnerable to narrowing in the setting of chronic hypertension and can result in small, punctate infarctions or intraparenchymal haemorrhage due to vessel rupture.

Focal lesions

Due to the orderly somatotropic arrangement of elements of the posterior limb of the internal capsule, small lesions can produce selective functional deficits.[3]

Lesions of the genu of the internal capsule affect fibers of the corticobulbar tract.

The primary motor cortex sends its axons through the posterior limb of the internal capsule. Lesions, therefore, result in a contralateral hemiparesis or hemiplegia. While symptoms of weakness due to an isolated lesion of the posterior limb can initially be severe, recovery of motor function is sometimes possible due to spinal projections of premotor cortical regions that are contained more rostrally in the internal capsule.[4]

See also

References

  1. Schmahmann, Jeremy D.; Schmahmann, Jeremy; Pandya, Deepak (2009-02-11). Fiber Pathways of the Brain. Oxford University Press, USA. ISBN 978-0-19-538826-8.
  2. Standring, Susan (2015-09-25). Gray's Anatomy E-Book: The Anatomical Basis of Clinical Practice. Elsevier Health Sciences. ISBN 978-0-7020-6851-5.
  3. Waxman, Stephen G. (2009). Clinical Neuroanatomy (26th ed.). New York: McGraw-Hill Medical. p. 145. ISBN 978-0-07-160399-7.
  4. Emos, Marc Christopher; Suheb, Mahammed Khan; Agarwal, Sanjeev (2022-06-13). "Neuroanatomy, Internal Capsule". StatPearls. PMID 31194338.
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