Rostral Neuropore

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Catherine Lubetzki - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • a case of epidermoid cyst arising from the Rostral Neuropore case report
    Neurosurgery, 1998
    Co-Authors: Martin Catala, Pierrefrancois Pradat, Philippe Cornu, Catherine Lubetzki
    Abstract:

    OBJECTIVE AND IMPORTANCE: Supratentorial epidermoid cysts located on the midline are very rare. We describe the first case of such a cyst arising from the Rostral Neuropore. CLINICAL PRESENTATION AND INTERVENTION: We report a patient suffering from seizures and progressive frontal syndrome and presenting with a huge cyst developed in the midline at the Rostralmost part of the corpus callosum. The patient was operated on, and the cyst was found to be epidermoid. CONCLUSION: Only six cases of supracallosal epidermoid cysts have been reported. In our case, the involved region was located at the exact limit between lamina terminalis and corpus callosum. This region corresponds to the place of the closing Rostral Neuropore during embryogenesis. We thus propose that the cyst arises from the Rostral Neuropore and that its eventual deep location is explained by the complex morphogenetic movements affecting the dorsal region of the telencephalic vesicle.

Martin Catala - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • a case of epidermoid cyst arising from the Rostral Neuropore case report
    Neurosurgery, 1998
    Co-Authors: Martin Catala, Pierrefrancois Pradat, Philippe Cornu, Catherine Lubetzki
    Abstract:

    OBJECTIVE AND IMPORTANCE: Supratentorial epidermoid cysts located on the midline are very rare. We describe the first case of such a cyst arising from the Rostral Neuropore. CLINICAL PRESENTATION AND INTERVENTION: We report a patient suffering from seizures and progressive frontal syndrome and presenting with a huge cyst developed in the midline at the Rostralmost part of the corpus callosum. The patient was operated on, and the cyst was found to be epidermoid. CONCLUSION: Only six cases of supracallosal epidermoid cysts have been reported. In our case, the involved region was located at the exact limit between lamina terminalis and corpus callosum. This region corresponds to the place of the closing Rostral Neuropore during embryogenesis. We thus propose that the cyst arises from the Rostral Neuropore and that its eventual deep location is explained by the complex morphogenetic movements affecting the dorsal region of the telencephalic vesicle.

Pierrefrancois Pradat - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • a case of epidermoid cyst arising from the Rostral Neuropore case report
    Neurosurgery, 1998
    Co-Authors: Martin Catala, Pierrefrancois Pradat, Philippe Cornu, Catherine Lubetzki
    Abstract:

    OBJECTIVE AND IMPORTANCE: Supratentorial epidermoid cysts located on the midline are very rare. We describe the first case of such a cyst arising from the Rostral Neuropore. CLINICAL PRESENTATION AND INTERVENTION: We report a patient suffering from seizures and progressive frontal syndrome and presenting with a huge cyst developed in the midline at the Rostralmost part of the corpus callosum. The patient was operated on, and the cyst was found to be epidermoid. CONCLUSION: Only six cases of supracallosal epidermoid cysts have been reported. In our case, the involved region was located at the exact limit between lamina terminalis and corpus callosum. This region corresponds to the place of the closing Rostral Neuropore during embryogenesis. We thus propose that the cyst arises from the Rostral Neuropore and that its eventual deep location is explained by the complex morphogenetic movements affecting the dorsal region of the telencephalic vesicle.

Philippe Cornu - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • a case of epidermoid cyst arising from the Rostral Neuropore case report
    Neurosurgery, 1998
    Co-Authors: Martin Catala, Pierrefrancois Pradat, Philippe Cornu, Catherine Lubetzki
    Abstract:

    OBJECTIVE AND IMPORTANCE: Supratentorial epidermoid cysts located on the midline are very rare. We describe the first case of such a cyst arising from the Rostral Neuropore. CLINICAL PRESENTATION AND INTERVENTION: We report a patient suffering from seizures and progressive frontal syndrome and presenting with a huge cyst developed in the midline at the Rostralmost part of the corpus callosum. The patient was operated on, and the cyst was found to be epidermoid. CONCLUSION: Only six cases of supracallosal epidermoid cysts have been reported. In our case, the involved region was located at the exact limit between lamina terminalis and corpus callosum. This region corresponds to the place of the closing Rostral Neuropore during embryogenesis. We thus propose that the cyst arises from the Rostral Neuropore and that its eventual deep location is explained by the complex morphogenetic movements affecting the dorsal region of the telencephalic vesicle.

F. Müller - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • the embryonic human brain an atlas of developmental stages
    2006
    Co-Authors: Ronan Orahilly, F. Müller
    Abstract:

    Historical Aspects Prenatal Measurements Prenatal Age Early Stages Stage 8: The First Appearance of the Nervous System Stage 9: The Major Divisions of the Brain Stage 10: The Neural Tube and the Optic Primordium Stage 11: Closure of the Rostral Neuropore Stage 12: Closure of the Caudal Neuropore and the Beginning of Secondary Neurulation Stage 13: The Closed Neural Tube and the First Appearance of the Cerebellum: Stage 14: The Future Cerebral Hemispheres Stage 15: Longitudinal Zoning in the Diencephalon Stage 16: Evagination of the Neurohypophysics Stage 17: The Future Olfactory Bulb and the First Amygdaloid Nuclei Stage 18: The Future Corpus Striatum, the Inferior Cerebellar Peduncle, and the Dentate Nucleus Stage 19: The Choroid Plexus of the Fourth Ventricle and the Medical Accessory Olivary Nucleus Stage 20: The Choroid Plexus of the Lateral Ventricles, the Optic and Habenular Commissures, and the Interpeduncular and Septal Nuclei.