In this anatomy lecture, Drbeen faculty, Dr. Adam Jones discusses the basic structure of the brain. Following structural elements are presented and discussed.
1. Sulcus
2. Fissure
3. Gyrus
4. Lateral fissure
5. Frontal lobe
6. Parietal lobe
7. Occipital lobe
8. Temporal lobe
9. Cerebellum
10. Brain stem
11. Central sulcus
12. Pre-central gyrus
13. Post-central gyrus
14. Broca’s area
15. Wernicke’s area
16. Grey mater
17. White mater
18. Corpus callosum
19. Midbrain
20. Pons
21. Medulla oblongata
22. Cerebral peduncles
23. Lateral Ventricles
24. Third ventricle
25. Caudate nucleus
26. Putamen nucleus
27. Thalamus
28. Internal capsule
29. Globus pallidus
30. Insula 31.
Cranium
32. Facial skeleton
33. Frontal bone
34. Parietal bone
35. Temporal bone
36. Sphenoid bone
37. Coronal suture
38. Sagittal suture
39. Occipital bone
40. Foramen Magnum
41. Styloid process
In this video we will learn about :
1. Osteology of brain.
2. Sulci and gyri.
3. 4 lobes of brain.
4. Brain stem structures.
5.Coronal section and important structures.
6. Wernincke's and broca area of brain.
7. Inferior section of brain and structures traversing.
M.D., MSc, BSc (Hons), PgCert, FHEA
Dr. Adam Lee Jones is a doctor from Wales, United Kingdom. He graduated from Cardiff University School of Medicine with degrees in Medical Genetics (BSc), Medicine (MBBCh), Public Health (MSc), and Medical Education (PgCert). Dr. Jones relocated to Melbourne, Australia, where he is currently pursuing psychiatry training with a focus on becoming a child psychiatrist. His professional interests lie in neurodiversity, developmental psychiatry, and medical education. Dr. Jones has a rich background in academia, having served as a lecturer at both Cardiff University and Birmingham University. He is passionate about teaching and frequently incorporates animated medical illustrations into his educational practice
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2 Comments
davemcerrn@*.com
Oct 10 2019, 3:21 am
When referring to to the peduncles connecting the cerebellum to the brainstem, these were identified as cerebral penduncles. I think you meant to say cerebellar peduncles. Easy enough to misstate, but I would think this would be caught during the editing process? Especially since it was also spelled out this way.... Never mind - saw previous post to this effect.
hstealerphani@*.com
Sep 29 2019, 6:25 am
at 10.26 min ....he said wrong...it is a cerebellar peduncle ...he said that is a cerebral peduncle....cerebral peduncle lies in the tegmentum of mid brain ...the anterior part of mid brain ..which is the crus cerebrii....thank u ..:)