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The Cerebellum in Sagittal Plane—Anatomic-MR Correlation: 1. The Vermis

Eric Courchesne, Gary A. Press, James Murakami, Dean Berthoty, Marjorie Grafe, Clayton A. Wiley and John R. Hesselink
American Journal of Neuroradiology July 1989, 10 (4) 659-665;
Eric Courchesne
1 The Neuropsychology Research Laboratory, Children’s Hospital Research Center, San Diego, CA 92123.
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Gary A. Press
2 Department of Radiology and Magnetic Resonance Institute, University of California, San Diego, School of Medicine, 225 Dickinson St., San Diego, CA 92103-1990. Address reprint requests to G. A. Press.
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James Murakami
1 The Neuropsychology Research Laboratory, Children’s Hospital Research Center, San Diego, CA 92123.
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Dean Berthoty
2 Department of Radiology and Magnetic Resonance Institute, University of California, San Diego, School of Medicine, 225 Dickinson St., San Diego, CA 92103-1990. Address reprint requests to G. A. Press.
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Marjorie Grafe
3 Department of Pathology, University of California, San Diego, School of Medicine, San Diego, CA 92103-1990.
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Clayton A. Wiley
3 Department of Pathology, University of California, San Diego, School of Medicine, San Diego, CA 92103-1990.
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John R. Hesselink
2 Department of Radiology and Magnetic Resonance Institute, University of California, San Diego, School of Medicine, 225 Dickinson St., San Diego, CA 92103-1990. Address reprint requests to G. A. Press.
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Abstract

Correlation of thin (5-mm) sagittal high-field (1.5-T) MR images of three brain specimens and 11 normal volunteers with microtome sections of the human cerebellar vermis and hemispheres demonstrates that proton-density-weighted (long TR/short TE) and T2-weighted (long TR/long TE) spin-echo pulse sequences provide the greatest contrast between gray and white matter. These images also can display (1) the corpus medullare and primary white-matter branches to the vermian lobules, including the lingula, centralis, culmen, declive, folium, tuber, pyramis, uvula, and nodulus; and (2) several finer secondary branches to individual folia within the lobules. Surface features of the vermis including the deeper fissures (e.g., preculminate, primary, horizontal, and prepyramidal) and shallower sulci are best delineated by T1-weighted (short TR/short TE) and T2-weighted images, which provide greatest contrast between CSF and parenchyma. Given that the width of the normal vermis varied from 6 to 12 mm in our volunteers, the acquisition of thin slices (≤5 mm) was required to minimize volume averaging of the cerebellar hemispheres with the vermis on a midline sagittal MR section.

Knowledge of the detailed normal anatomy of the cerebellar vermis on sagittal MR images can assist in the identification of various pathologic alterations.

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American Journal of Neuroradiology
Vol. 10, Issue 4
1 Jul 1989
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Cite this article
Eric Courchesne, Gary A. Press, James Murakami, Dean Berthoty, Marjorie Grafe, Clayton A. Wiley, John R. Hesselink
The Cerebellum in Sagittal Plane—Anatomic-MR Correlation: 1. The Vermis
American Journal of Neuroradiology Jul 1989, 10 (4) 659-665;

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The Cerebellum in Sagittal Plane—Anatomic-MR Correlation: 1. The Vermis
Eric Courchesne, Gary A. Press, James Murakami, Dean Berthoty, Marjorie Grafe, Clayton A. Wiley, John R. Hesselink
American Journal of Neuroradiology Jul 1989, 10 (4) 659-665;
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