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Review
The enigmatic psalterium: a review and anatomic study with relevance to callosotomy procedures.
- R Shane Tubbs, Anand N Bosmia, Tulika Gupta, Kunal Chawla, Marios Loukas, Daisy Sahni, and Aaron A Cohen-Gadol.
- *Section of Pediatric Neurosurgery, Children's of Alabama, Birmingham, Alabama; ‡Department of Anatomical Sciences, St. George's University, Grenada; §Centre of Anatomy and Human Identification, University of Dundee, United Kingdom; ¶Department of Anatomy, Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education & Research, Chandigarh, India; ‖Goodman Campbell Brain and Spine, Department of Neurological Surgery, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana; #Indiana University Simon Cancer Center, Indianapolis, Indiana.
- Neurosurgery. 2015 Jun 1;11 Suppl 2:322-8; discussion 328.
BackgroundRecalcitrant seizures after callosotomy procedures are challenging to treat. One commissure, the psalterium, has received little attention.ObjectiveTo review the literature on this structure, and with dissection, better elucidate its morphology and relationships.MethodsTwenty adult cadaver brains underwent microsurgical dissection of the psalterium. Measurements included the size and distance from the splenium of the corpus callosum and posterior border of the hippocampus tail. Observations included the relationships between the psalterium and the vein of Galen and the fiber direction within this structure.ResultsThe psalterium was identified in all specimens. It intimately contacted the undersurface of the splenium superiorly and the velum interpositum inferiorly. It was always in the midline. Just posterior to the psalterium, the internal cerebral veins were found leaving the velum interpositum to drain into the vein of Galen. In most specimens, the psalterium fibers traveled in the same plane as the commissural fibers of the splenium. Mean width of the psalterium was 11 mm; mean length was 13 mm. Average thickness in the midline was 1.4 mm, and at the lateral edges, it was generally thicker as it joined the fornix with an average of 2 mm. In 30%, efferents from the hippocampus were arranged in the form of a sheet bilaterally rather than the normal bundle-like formation forming the posterior crura.ConclusionBetter understanding of the commissures of the human brain, including the psalterium, might help the neurosurgeon during procedures near this structure.
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