Normal infant brain anatomy: correlated real-time sonograms and brain specimens
- 1 October 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Roentgen Ray Society in American Journal of Roentgenology
- Vol. 137 (4) , 815-820
- https://doi.org/10.2214/ajr.137.4.815
Abstract
An investigation of the identifiable real-time sonographic features of the normal infant brain in the horizontal, coronal, inclined coronal, and midsagittal planes was undertaken. Correlations were made of sonograms of intact brains in vitro, corresponding brain sections, and sonograms in vivo. A large number of anatomic structures could be consistently depicted including cisterns, fissures, faix cerebri, tentorium cerebelli, ventricles, brainstem, cerebellum, basal ganglia, thalami, and corpus callosum. Pulsations of intracranial arteries, visible by real-time sonography, were of considerable help in identifying various structures. The investigation provides a reference of sonographic anatomy of the brain displayed in four clinically useful imaging planes.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- B-mode echoencephalography in the normal and high risk infantAmerican Journal of Roentgenology, 1979
- Detection of Dilated Cerebral Ventricles in Infants: A Correlative Study Between Ultrasound and Computed TomographyRadiology, 1979
- Studies in ultrasonic echoencephalography—VII: Gdneral principles of recording information in ultrasonic B- and c-scanning and the effects of scatter, reflection and refraction by cadaver skull on this informationMedical & Biological Engineering & Computing, 1967