medial frontal sulcus (human)

The term medial frontal sulcus (human) refers to a sulcus found in 68% of human brains. Parallel to the longitudinal fissure and the superior frontal sulcus it is located within the superior frontal gyrus anterior to the, also variably present, marginal precentral sulcus ( Ono-1990 ).

Also known as: medial frontal sulcus, sulcus frontalis intermedius

NeuroNames ID: 1618

All Names & Sources

Showing 2 synonym(s)

Name:

medial frontal sulcus

Language:

English

Organism:

human

Source:

Ono-1990

Citation:

Atlas of the Cerebral Sulci, Thieme Medical Publishers, Inc., New York, 1990.

Source Title:

Atlas of the Cerebral Sulci

Name:

sulcus frontalis intermedius

Language:

English

Organism:

human

Source:

Szikla-1977

Citation:

Springer-Verlag, Berlin, Heidelberg, New York, 1977

Source Title:

Angiography Of The Human Brain Cortex: Atlas of Vascular Patterns and Stereotactic Cortical Localization

No illustrations found

No illustrations available for this concept.

Species With The Structure
Equivalent By Human Macaque Rat Mouse
Internal Structure Has The Structure Relevant Data Not Located Relevant Data Not Located Relevant Data Not Located

Showing 2 record(s)

Basis:

Internal Structure

Has Equivalent:

Yes

Their Name:

medial frontal sulcus

Source:

Ono-1990

Basis:

Internal Structure

Has Equivalent:

Yes

Their Name:

sulcus frontalis intermedius

Source:

Szikla-1977

No models found

No models available for this concept.