Transitory and Vestigial Structures of the Developing Human Nervous System

As with many body organs, the human central nervous system contains many structures and cavities that may have had functions in embryonic and fetal life but are vestigial or atrophic at maturity. Examples are the septum pellucidum, remnants of the lamina terminalis, Cajal-Retzius neurons, induseum griseum, habenula, and accessory olfactory bulb. Other structures are transitory in fetal or early postnatal life, disappearing from the mature brain. Examples are the neural crest, subpial granular glial layer of Brun over cerebral cortex, radial glial cells and subplate zone of cerebral cortex.
Source: Pediatric Neurology - Category: Neurology Authors: Tags: Review Article Source Type: research
More News: Brain | Neurology | Pediatrics