superior limiting sulcus ( slms )

The term superior limiting sulcus refers to one of three parts of the limiting sulcus in the human ( Ture-1999 ). Identified by dissection, it separates the insula from the frontoparietal operculum. The other parts are the inferior limiting sulcus and the anterior limiting sulcus. In the macaque it is one of just two parts; the other is the inferior limiting sulcus. The limiting sulcus is not present in rodents. Updated 31 May 2024.

Also known as

Name Language Source Source Citation Source Title Organism
superior marginal sulcus of the insula English Szikla-1977 Springer-Verlag, Berlin, Heidelberg, New York, 1977 Angiography Of The Human Brain Cortex: Atlas of Vascular Patterns and Stereotactic Cortical Localization human
superior limiting sulcus English Mufson-1997 Chapter VII, pp.377-454 in Handbook of Chemical Neuroanatomy: The Primate Nervous System, Part I, F. Bloom, A. Bjorklund and T. Hokfelt, Eds., Elsevier, Amsterdam, 1997. Chemical neuroanatomy of the primate insula cortex: relationship to cytoarchitectonics, connectivity, function and neurodegeneration macaque
superior limb of the circular sulcus English Mufson-1997 Chapter VII, pp.377-454 in Handbook of Chemical Neuroanatomy: The Primate Nervous System, Part I, F. Bloom, A. Bjorklund and T. Hokfelt, Eds., Elsevier, Amsterdam, 1997. Chemical neuroanatomy of the primate insula cortex: relationship to cytoarchitectonics, connectivity, function and neurodegeneration macaque
верхняя бороздка островка (Рейля) Russian Savel'ev-1996 AREA XVII, Moscow, 1996. Stereoskopicheskii Atlas Mozga Cheloveka human
sulcus superior insulae (Reilli) Latin Savel'ev-1996 AREA XVII, Moscow, 1996. Stereoskopicheskii Atlas Mozga Cheloveka human
superior periinsular sulcus English Ture-1999 Topographic anatomy of the insular region human
slms acronym NeuroNames University of Washington, Seattle, WA NeuroNames human
superior peri-insular sulcus English Morecraft-1997 Neuroreport 1997 Dec 22;8(18):3933-8 Segregated parallel inputs to the brachial spinal cord from the cingulate motor cortex in the monkey human
An unhandled error has occurred. Reload 🗙