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Cerebellar peduncles

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Cerebellar penduncles
Details
Identifiers
Latinpedunculi cerebellares
NeuroNames1207
NeuroLex IDbirnlex_970
TA98A14.1.07.412
TA25845
FMA77791
Anatomical terms of neuroanatomy

The cerebellar peduncles are three paired bundles of fibres that connect the cerebellum to the brain stem.[1]

The peduncles form the lateral border of the fourth ventricle, and form a distinctive diamond – the middle peduncle forming the central corners of the diamond, while the superior and inferior peduncles form the superior and inferior edges, respectively.

Structural origin

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Superior cerebellar peduncle

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The superior cerebellar peduncles (bracchia conjunctiva) emerge from the cerebellum and ascend to form the lateral portion of the roof of the fourth ventricle, where they enter the brainstem below the inferior colliculi. They are bridged by the superior medullary velum. The superior cerebellar peduncles represent the main output route from the cerebellum, and as such, most of their fibers are efferent. A relatively small afferent contribution is present. The efferent pathways include the cerebellorubral, dentatothalamic, and fastigioreticular tracts. All of them emerge from the deep cerebellar nuclei; the cerebellorubral fibers from the globose nucleus and emboliform nucleus, the dentatothalamic fibers from the dentate nucleus, and the fastigioreticular fibers from the fastigial nucleus.

They emerge together to ascend in the roof of the fourth ventricle and proceed anteriorly to the midbrain tegmental area medial to the lateral lemniscus. The cerebellorubral fibers cross over at this point to enter the contralateral red nucleus. The dentatothalamic fibers also cross over and ascend to synapse in the ventral intermediate, and ventral anterior nuclei of the thalamus. The fastigioreticular fibers enter the reticular formation of the midbrain, pons, and medulla oblongata.

Afferent pathways include the anterior spinocerebellar tract, and the tectocerebellar tract. The fibers of the anterior spinocerebellar tract originate in Clarke's column of the spinal cord and cross in the anterior white commissure to the lateral funiculus, where they ascend to upper pontine levels before crossing back to enter the cerebellum through the superior peduncle. They terminate in the hind limb region of the cerebellar cortex. The tectocerebellar tracts emerge from the superior and inferior colliculi on both sides, terminating in the intermediate vermis (culmen, declive, folium, tuber, pyramid) and the lobulus simplex. The function of the tectocerebellar tract is not known, but it is widely believed to mediate visual and auditory reflexes.

References

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  1. ^ Yamada, K; Kizu, O; Ito, H; Nakamura, H; Yuen, S; Yoshikawa, K; Shiga, K; Nishimura, T (2003). "Wallerian degeneration of the inferior cerebellar peduncle depicted by diffusion weighted imaging". Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry. 74 (7): 977–978. doi:10.1136/jnnp.74.7.977. PMC 1738530. PMID 12810799.