Now on ScienceBlogs: Let the War on Christmas Begin. Atheist style.

Seed Media Group

Collective Imagination

Neurotopia

Stronger. Faster. Bloggier. Now chock full of glial goodness. **Warning** contains neuro-nuts.

Search

Profile

EVIL.jpg The Evil Monkey has a Ph.D. in Neuroscience from a southeastern U.S. university. After a postdoctoral nightmare of Inquisitorial proportions, he is currently working in a laboratory and an adjunct assistant professor at a nearby state university.


scicurious2.png Scicurious is a graduate student wrestling with a PhD in Physiology at a southern institution. She is a nerd, a geek, and also a dork. And yes, that really is her brain.


icon.jpgNotoriousLTP is an MD-PhD student in New York City.  After finishing (hopefully soon) his PhD in behavioral neuroscience, he will re-enter the fun vortex that is medical education.



Disclaimer: The opinions on this blog do not represent any organization to which we may belong, or employers, or basically anybody but us. So there.

Recent Comments

Recent Posts

Categories

Blogroll

Archives

Other Junk

Locations of visitors to this page


Add this blog to my Technorati Favorites!

Steal This Button and Link Here!
neurobutton.png


Open_Lab_2009_editor.jpg

« Part 1 of Welcome to MY Brain! Introduction and general features | Main | Friday Weird Science: Got Hiccups? We have the cure for you! »

Part 2 of Welcome to MY Brain! Of mater and brain holes.

Category: NeuroanatomyNeuroscience
Posted on: January 22, 2009 1:29 AM, by Scicurious

Ok, so I thought I would be able to do this brain stuff in TWO entries, but I think it might have to be three. After all, the brain is a wondrous, glorious world of awesome, and MY brain in particular is especially nice. Last time I talked about the outer features of the brain and the division of the brain into traditional lobes of form and function. So today I'm going to give a brief intro to things with arcane sounding names, like dura mater and the choroid plexus, and talk about why it's ok that your brain is full of holes.

So let's begin!

The Maters

Picture%209.png

What I want you to focus your attention on here are the outer edges of my brain. Right here:

Picture%209a.png

What I've shakily outlined for you in the photo above are two of the three kinds of coverings that surround your brain. We'll get to the third covering once I've covered the first two. Why three coverings, you say? Because, contrary to a certain amount of popular belief, your brain isn't actually rattling around in your skull. Instead, it is surrounded by three layers of...stuff...one of which is filled with fluid, leaving the brain floating comfortably surrounded like a baby in a womb.

The outer of these layers is the one that I've lined in yellow. We call this the "dura mater", which literally means "hard mother". And it is a HARD motherfucker. Seriously, you can't rip this stuff. We have some accompanying our neuroanatomy brains. I don't want to know how old it is, but it still looks just as good as the day it was pulled out. In interesting medical terms, a subdural hematoma is when you tear veins in your head, and blood builds up in your dura. Very nasty.

The middle of the three layers is scribbled in in red. This is the arachnoid mater, which means "cob-web like". It's a thicker layer, as you can tell, and very soft, filled with cerebrospinal fluid. Cerebrospinal fluid is one of the little known heroes of your brain. It surrounds and fills every crevice, and produced in volumes of almost half a liter a day! This is the cushion your brain relies on most to get it through the bumps and bruises of life. I might add that it is also pretty easy to make up in the lab.

So where do we get these vast quantities of cerebrospinal fluid? From here:

Picture%208a.png

that clumsy outline you see in green outlines my very nice, clear choroid plexus. The choroid plexus is a dense network of capillaries that are constantly making cerebrospinal fluid. When you take them out of the brain, they look like little fluffy fan sponges.

sponge.jpg

Like that.

So under the arachnoid layer, there is one further layer. Unfortunately, it's going to take some advanced in technology before we see one of those on a brain scan. The pia mater (meaning "tender mother") is a thin, delicate layer, so close to your brain that it thinly veils each sulcus and gyrus. Getting one of these off your brain in order to dissect is ANNOYING.

Ok, so you might have noticed that the choroid plexus on either side appears to be in holes in my brain. My brain is full of holes. Believe me, this is not an uncommon occurance. Everyone's brain is full of holes, though some of course have more than others. There are four main ventrcles, with various channels running between them. These ventricles are what circulates your cerebrospinal fluid. Two two you can see here:

Picture%208.png

Are the paired lateral ventricles, while the third and fourth ventricles are more easily seen on the midline, here:

Picture%204.png

The first and second ventricles vanished and were squished away during development. Each ventricle contains a separate choroid plexus to supply the brain with cerebrospinal fluid, though you can only see the ones in the lateral ventricles in my scan.

ventricular system.png

And with that, folks, Sci is going to call it a night. Tune in next time (which may be next week) for the final installment of the awesomeness that is Sci's brain!!

Share this: Stumbleupon Reddit Email + More

TrackBacks

TrackBack URL for this entry: http://scienceblogs.com/mt/pings/92096

Comments

1

Hot brain...

On another note, one of my friends in college started getting extreme migraines senior year, only to find that he had an arachnoid cyst the size of a tangerine in his brain filled with CSF. He had to have a few holes drilled in his skull and couldn't drink for like 2 months!

Posted by: Arikia | January 22, 2009 11:53 AM

2

Hawt! But keep an eye out on your google analytics...I think there will be many disappointed milf porn seekers coming to this page!! :-))

Posted by: arvind | January 22, 2009 6:40 PM

3

arvind: EEK! I guess it says something about Sci's naivete that I never even thought of that...I will be looking, it would amuse me greatly.

Posted by: scicurious | January 22, 2009 8:35 PM

4

Cute brain you've got there :-)

Posted by: Donna B. | January 23, 2009 6:43 AM

5

Awesome posts; now I want a scan of my brain! (Although I am just a little concerned that my head is filled with sea serpents rather than a brain.)

Posted by: Laelaps | January 23, 2009 2:13 PM

Post a Comment

(Email is required for authentication purposes only. On some blogs, comments are moderated for spam, so your comment may not appear immediately.)





ScienceBlogs

Search ScienceBlogs:

Go to:

Advertisement
Enter to win a free copy of The Monty Hall Problem
Visit the Collective Imagination blog
Advertisement
Collective Imagination

© 2006-2009 Seed Media Group LLC. ScienceBlogs is a registered trademark of Seed Media Group. All rights reserved.

Sites by Seed Media Group: Seed Media Group | ScienceBlogs | SEEDMAGAZINE.COM