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Brodmann area 28 is a subdivision of the cerebral cortex defined on the basis of cytoarchitecture. It is located on the medial aspect of the temporal lobe and is part of the entorhinal cortex (Brodmann-1909).
Brodmann area 28 | |
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Details | |
Identifiers | |
Latin | area entorhinalis ventralis |
NeuroNames | 1030 |
NeuroLex ID | birnlex_2709 |
FMA | 68625 |
Anatomical terms of neuroanatomy |
Human
editIn humans, Brodmann area 28, and Brodmann area 34 together constitute approximately the entorhinal cortex (Brodmann-1909).
Guenon
editBrodmann regarded the location of area 28 adjacent to the hippocampus as imprecisely represented in the illustration of the cortex of the guenon brain in Brodmann-1909. It is located on the medial aspect of the temporal lobe.
Distinctive features (Brodmann-1905)
editThe molecular layer (I) is unusually wide; the external granular layer (II) contains nests of, for the most part, multipolar cells: the external pyramidal layer (III) contains medium-sized pyramidal cells which merge with cells of the internal pyramidal layer (V); a clear cell free zone represents sublayer 5b of layer V; the multiform layer is wide and has a less clear two sublayer structure; the internal granular layer (IV) is totally absent.
See also
editExternal links
edit- For Neuroanatomy of Brodmann area 28 visit BrainInfo