Cingulate cortex

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Brain: Cingulate cortex
Medial surface of left cerebral hemisphere.
Medial surface.
Latin gyrus cingulatus
Gray's subject #189 825
Part of Cerebral cortex
Artery Anterior cerebral
Vein Superior sagittal sinus
Acronym(s) Cg
NeuroNames hier-141
MeSH Gyrus+Cinguli

The cingulate cortex is a part of the brain situated in the medial aspect of the cortex. It is extended from the corpus callosum below to the cingulate sulcus above, at least anteriorly.

Contents

Cingulum means belt in Latin. The name has been likely selected to assess that this cortex, in great part, surrounds the corpus callosum. Cingulate is an adjective (cingularis or cingulatus). The cingulate cortex is a part of the "grand lobe limbique" of Broca (1898) that comprised (in addition to the olfactory part, which is no more considered there today) a superior cingulate part, supracallosal and an inferior hippocampic part, infracallosal. The limbic cortex was separated from the remaining of the cortex by Broca on two arguments. The first was that it is not convoluted. The second is that the gyri are directed parasagitally (contrary to the transverse gyrification). Since the parasagittal gyrification is observed in non-primate species, the limbic lobe was thus declared to be "bestial". As well as other parts of the cortex, there has been and continue to be discrepancies concerning boundaries and naming. Brodmann (1909), a student of C. and O.Vogt, who worked on cercopithecus (and not much in human (Bailey and von Bonin, ), elaborated a system of numeration that had unfortunately no typological logics (1 is sensory,as well as 2 and 3 but 4 is motor, 5 is parietal and 6 is premotor 7 is again parietal!). Area 25 was even not placed by him in the same place in the human brain. Area 24 (anterior) was distinguished from 23 (posterior) on the fact that it was agranular. Later appeared the typographical von Economo's system adopted by Bailey and von Bonin. Simple typographical naming should be preferred for an evident heuristic purpose.

Based on cytoarchitectonics it has been divided into the Brodmann areas 23, 24, 26, 29, 30, 31 and 32. The areas 26, 29 and 30 are usually referred to as the retrospenial areas.

This corresponds to the area 24 of Brodmann LA of von Economo and Bailey and von Bonin. It is continued anteriorly by the subgenual cortex (area 25). It is cytoarchitectonically agranular. It has a gyral part on the surface and a sulcal part. Anterior cingulate cortex can further be divided in the perigenual anterior cingulate cortex and midcingulate cortex. The anterior cingulate cortex receives primarily its afferent axons from the anterior nucleus (nucleus anterior of the thalamus, see thalamus). The nucleus anterior receives mamillo-thalamic afferences. The mamillary neurons receive axons from the subiculum. The whole forms a part of Papez' circuit.The anterior cingulate cortex sends axons to the anterior nucleus and through the cingulum to other Broca's limbic areas.

Correspond to area 23 of Brodmann, LP of von Economo and Bailey and von Bonin. It is granular. It is followed posteriorly by the retrosplenial cortex (area 29). Dorsally is the granular area 31. The posterior cingulate cortex receives a great part of its afferent axons from the superficial nucleus (or nucleus superior- falsely LD-) of the thalamus (see thalamus), which itself receives axons from the subiculum. To some extent it thus duplicates Papez' circuit. It receives also direct afferents from the subiculum of the hippocampus.

At the base of the cingulate cortex is a thick parasagittal bundle , strongly increasing in evolution, the cingulum. In humans, it can even be dissected. The cingulum is used for the connections of the 2 above described subdivisions and with the parahippocampic gyrus


Cingulate cortex can also be differentiated based on its thalamic connections1: midlline and intralaminar nuclei .

  1. Vogt BA, Rosene DL, Pandya DN, Science 204:205+
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