Abstract

The literature describing the complex anatomy of the middle cerebral artery (MCA), lenticulostriate arteries, and recurrent artery of Heubner, does not discuss the comparative anatomy of the cerebrum, MCA, the recurrent artery of Heubner, and the relationship of the MCA with the rhinal sulci. The entorhinal literature does not detail the comparative anatomic modification of the rhinal and endorhinal sulci, piriform lobe and the hippocampus's compressed positional change in the temporal lobe. This investigation's objectives were to analyze the comparative anatomic modifications of the cerebrum, the MCA, lenticulostriate arteries, recurrent artery of Heubner, olfactory tubercule, anterior perforate substance, rhinal sulcus, endorhinal sulcus, piriform lobe, entorhinal cortex, and hippocampus. Brain dissections of adult iguana, rabbit, sheep, cat, dog, macaque, human and human fetal specimens were analyzed. The MCA branches enter the striate nuclei via the endorhinal sulcus, with few branches present in the rhinal sulcus. Modifications of the cerebrum, with the development of gyri and sulci and opercula covering the insula, changes the linear surface configuration of the MCA into a tridimensional one. Similar changes are present in human fetal specimens. The cerebral neocortical expansion changes the position of the rhinal and endorhinal sulci, their relationship with the MCA, the size of the olfactory tubercule, the position and size of the piriform lobe, and the diagonal course of the lenticulostriates and recurrent artery of Heubner. The hippocampus becomes compressed in the inferomedial region of the human temporal lobe. The lenticulostriate arteries are likely the first developed component of the MCA.

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