Brain

Brain structure and function:

Six major regions of the adult brain:

Ventricles:

All joking aside, the brain IS hollow. It contains internal cavities filled with cerebrospinal fluid, and has a central passageway that expands to form four chambers called ventricles.

The largest are the two lateral ventricles located in each cerebral hemisphere. There is no direct connection between the lateral ventricles. There is an opening, however, called the interventricular foramen, that allows each of them to communicate with the third ventricle of the diencephalon.

Instead of a ventricle, the midbrain has a slender canal known as the mesencephalic aqueduct, or cerebral aqueduct, which connects the third and fourth ventricles of the pons and upper portion of the medulla oblongata. Within the medulla, the fourth ventricle narrows and becomes continuous with the central canal of the spinal cord.

See also: Brain Works Quiz .

This page was updated in December 2005.