Interpeduncular fossa

The interpeduncular fossa is a deep depression of the ventral surface of the midbrain between the two cerebal crura. It has been found in humans and macaques, but not in rats or mice, showing that this is a relatively new evolutionary region.

Structure

The interpeduncular fossa is a somewhat rhomboid-shaped area of the base of the brain.

Features

The lateral wall of the interpeduncular fossa bears a groove - the oculomotor sulcus - from which rootlets of the oculomotor nerve emerge from the substance of the brainstem and aggregate into a single fascicle.

Anatomical relations

The ventral tegmental area lies at the depth of the interpeduncular fossa.

Boundaries

The interpeduncular fossa is in front by the optic chiasma, behind by the antero-superior surface of the pons, antero-laterally by the converging optic tracts, and postero-laterally by the diverging cerebral peduncles.

The floor of interpeduncular fossa, from behind forward, are the posterior perforated substance, corpora mamillaria, tuber cinereum, infundibulum, and pituitary gland.

Contents

Contents of interpeduncular fossa include oculomotor nerve, and circle of Willis.

The basal veins pass alongside the interpeduncular fossa before joining the great cerebral vein.

Clinical significance

The most common locations for neurocutaneous melanosis have occurred along the interpeduncular fossa, ventral brainstem, upper cervical cord, and ventral lumbosacral cord.

See also

Additional images

References

Public domainThis article incorporates text in the public domain from page 816 of the 20th edition of Gray's Anatomy (1918)

Uses material from the Wikipedia article Interpeduncular fossa, released under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.