foramina

(noun)

The openings inside the body that typically allow muscles, nerves, arteries, veins, or other structures to connect one part of the body to another.

Related Terms

  • foramen ovale

Examples of foramina in the following topics:

  • Foramina

    • The human skull has numerous holes known as foramina through which cranial nerves, arteries, veins, and other structures pass.
    • Foramina inside the body of humans and other animals typically allow muscles, nerves, arteries, veins, or other structures to connect one part of the body with another.
    • The human skull has numerous foramina through which cranial nerves, arteries, veins, and other structures pass.
    • The skull bones that contain foramina include the frontal, ethmoid, sphenoid, maxilla, palatine, temporal, and occipital lobes.
    • Foramina of cribriform plate: Located in the ethmoid bone, it allows the passage of the olfactory nerve.
  • Ventricles

    • CSF flows from the lateral ventricles via the foramina of Monro into the third ventricle, and then into the fourth ventricle via the cerebral aqueduct in the brainstem.
    • From there, it passes into the central canal of the spinal cord and into the cisterns of the subarachnoid space via three small foramina: the central foramen of Magendie and the two lateral foramina of Luschka.
    • The aqueduct between the third and fourth ventricles is very small, as are the foramina.
  • Supply of Blood and Nerves to Bone

    • One or two main diaphyseal nutrient arteries enter the shaft obliquely through one or two nutrient foramina leading to nutrient canals.
    • Except for a few with double or no foramina, 90% of long bones have a single nutrient foramen in the middle third of the shaft.
  • Overview of the Spinal Nerves

    • Each nerve emerges in two divisions: one division through the anterior sacral foramina and the other division through the posterior sacral foramina.
  • Parts of a Vertebra

    • The intervertebral foramina that facilitate access to the spinal cord for nerves and vessels.
  • The Spine

    • Between each pair of vertebrae are two small openings called intervertebral foramina through which the spinal nerves exit.
  • Spinal Cord Grey Matter and Spinal Roots

    • Dorsal roots and ventral roots come together and exit the intervertebral foramina as they become spinal nerves.
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