Chiasmatic cistern

The chiasmatic cistern (cistern of chiasma, or suprasellar cistern) is formed as the interpeduncular cistern extends forward across the optic chiasm and onto the upper surface of the corpus callosum – the arachnoid stretches across from one cerebral hemisphere to the other immediately beneath the free border of the falx cerebri, and thus leaves a space in which the anterior cerebral arteries are contained. The "leaf" or extension of the chiasmatic cistern above the chiasma, which is separated from the optic recess of the third ventricle by the thin lamina terminalis, has been called the suprachiasmatic cistern. As spaces filled with freely circulating cerebrospinal fluid, cisterns receive little direct study, but are mentioned in pathological conditions. Cysts and tumors of the lamina terminalis extend into the suprachiasmatic cistern, as can pituitary tumors, or the cistern can be partially or completely effaced by injury and hematoma[1] or by blockage of the cerebral aqueduct.

Chiasmatic cistern
Details
Identifiers
Latincisterna chiasmatica
NeuroLex IDbirnlex_4003
TAA14.1.01.211
FMA74515
Anatomical terms of neuroanatomy

References

This article incorporates text in the public domain from page 877 of the 20th edition of Gray's Anatomy (1918)

  1. Tseng SH (1992). "Delayed traumatic intracerebral hemorrhage: a study of prognostic factors". J. Formos. Med. Assoc. 91 (6): 585–9. PMID 1358343.


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