Superior cerebellar peduncle

Brain: Superior cerebellar peduncle
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Sagittal section of the cerebellum, near the junction of the vermis with the hemisphere. (Superior peduncle labeled at upper right.)
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Dissection showing the projection fibers of the cerebellum. (Superior peduncle labeled at center top.)
Latin pedunculus cerebellaris superior
Gray's subject #187 792
NeuroNames ancil-1289712953
NeuroLex ID birnlex_1711

The superior cerebellar peduncles (brachia conjunctiva), two in number, emerge from the upper and medial part of the white substance of the hemispheres and are placed under cover of the upper part of the cerebellum.

They are joined to each other across the middle line by the anterior medullary velum, and can be followed upward as far as the inferior colliculi, under which they disappear.

Below, they form the upper lateral boundaries of the fourth ventricle, but as they ascend they converge on the dorsal aspect of the ventricle and thus assist in roofing it in.

All fibers (except vestibular fibers to the vestibular nuclei through the inferior cerebellar peduncle) carrying information from the spinal cord to the cerebellum (Ventral Spinocerebellar Tract) pass through the superior cerebellar peduncle.

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This article incorporates text from a public domain edition of Gray's Anatomy.


This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Superior cerebellar peduncle".