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Human Neuroanatomy

  • Book

  • June 2024
  • Elsevier Science and Technology
  • ID: 5917409

Human Neuroanatomy is a unique resource that presents the neuroanatomy of the central and peripheral nervous systems. This atlas-style reference features human brain sections with radiological correlations and original illustrations accompanying macroscopic and microscopic photographs. Chapters include a large number of illustrations in the form of photographs, Illustrations, and MR imaging, including a human brain atlas. Boxes within each chapter contain clinical information, with tables of topic summaries. Presented along with clinical approaches and analyses, this is a reference for all neuroscientists, neurosurgeons, neurologists, medical students, and all students of neuroscience.

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Table of Contents

1. Development of the nervous system
2. General organization of the nervous system
3. Neurohistology
4. Telencephalon
5. Diencephalon
6. Basal nuclei
7. Limbic system
8. Brainstem
9. Brain vessels and meninges
10. Cerebellum
11. Spinal cord
12. Ascending and descending pathways of the spinal cord
13. Cranial nerves
14. Spinal nerves
15. Autonomic nervous system
16. Visual system
17. Auditory and vestibular systems
18. Chemical sensory systems
19. Somatosensory system
20. Atlas of the human brain

Authors

Reha Erzurumlu Gulgun Sengul Professor of Anatomy, Ege University School of Medicine, Turkey. Dr Gulgun Sengul, MD is a specialist in the anatomy of the spinal cord and brainstem, with a particular interest in pain pathways. Dr Sengul co-authored 'The Spinal Cord: A Christopher and Dana Reeve Foundation Text and Atlas' published by Elsevier in 2009. Dr Sengul was first author of the 'Atlas of the Spinal Cord of the Rat, Mouse, Marmoset, Rhesus, and Human' published by Elsevier in 2013. This latter book includes the first published atlases of the spinal cord of the marmoset and rhesus monkeys and the first diagrammatic and cytoarchitectonic atlas of the human spinal cord. Dr Sengul also contributed to the Allen Spinal Cord Atlas and brainstem part of the BrainSpan Atlas of the Developing Human Brain projects. The rodent and primate atlases produced by Dr Sengul and her colleagues provide an important platform for future spinal cord research. Emel Ulupinar