Deep cerebellar nuclei
The cerebellum has four deep cerebellar nuclei embedded in the white matter in its center. 4 pairs of nuclei are embedded deep in the medullary centre, in the medial to lateral direction. They are fastigial nuclei, globose nuclei, emboliform nuclei, dentate nuclei.
Deep cerebellar nuclei | |
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Details | |
Part of | Cerebellum |
Parts | Dentate nucleus, Emboliform nucleus, Fastigial nucleus, Globose nucleus |
Artery | Superior cerebellar |
Identifiers | |
Latin | nuclei cerebelli |
MeSH | D002529 |
NeuroNames | 682 |
NeuroLex ID | birnlex_1568 |
TA98 | A14.1.07.406 |
TA2 | 5835 |
FMA | 72249 |
Anatomical terms of neuroanatomy |
Inputs
These nuclei receive inhibitory (GABAergic) inputs from Purkinje cells in the cerebellar cortex and excitatory (glutamatergic) inputs from mossy fiber and climbing fiber pathways. Most output fibers of the cerebellum originate from these nuclei. One exception is that fibers from the flocculonodular lobe synapse directly on vestibular nuclei without first passing through the deep cerebellar nuclei. The vestibular nuclei in the brainstem are analogous structures to the deep nuclei, since they receive both mossy fiber and Purkinje cell inputs.
Specific nuclei
From lateral to medial, the four deep cerebellar nuclei are the dentate, emboliform, globose, and fastigii. Some animals, including humans, do not have distinct emboliform and globose nuclei, instead having a single, fused interposed nucleus. In animals with distinct emboliform and globose nuclei, the term interposed nucleus is often used to refer collectively to these two nuclei.
Topography
In general, each pair of deep nuclei is associated with a corresponding region of cerebellar surface anatomy.
- Cross-section of human cerebellum, showing the dentate nucleus, as well as fourth ventricle
- Cross-section of human cerebellum, showing the dentate nucleus and cross-section of vermis
- The dentate nuclei are deep within the lateral hemispheres,
- the interposed nuclei are located in the paravermal (intermediate) zone,
- and the fastigial nuclei are in the vermis.
These structural relationships are generally maintained in the neuronal connections between the nuclei and associated cerebellar cortex,
- with the dentate nucleus receiving most of its connections from the lateral hemispheres,
- the interposed nuclei receiving inputs mostly from the paravermis,
- and the fastigial nucleus receiving primarily afferents from the vermis.
References
- Ryan Splittgerber (2019). Snell's Clinical Neuroanatomy (8th ed.). Wolters Kluwer. ISBN 978-1496346759.
External links
- Illustration and text: cere/text/P5/intro.htm at the University of Wisconsin-Madison Medical school
- https://web.archive.org/web/20150621011739/http://www.mona.uwi.edu/fpas/courses/physiology/neurophysiology/Cerebellum.htm