parietal operculum ( OPRpr )

The term parietal operculum (OPRpr) refers to the part of the supramarginal gyrus (SMG) of the parietal lobe (PLB), that overlies the caudal portion of the insula (INS) in the human. Rostrally it is separated from the subcentral operculum (OPRsc) by the postcentral sulcus (pocs) ( Ture-1999 ). Identified by dissection,.the posterior one-third of the superior limiting sulcus (slms) separates it from the INS deep in the lateral fissure (ltf). It is not found in the macaque where the OPRsc covers the entire caudal part of te INS ( Mesulam-1985 ). Nor is it found in the smooth cerebral cortex (CTX) of the rat and mouse ( NeuroNames ). Updated 30 Aug 2024.

Also known as

Name Language Source Source Citation Source Title Organism
parietal operculum English Roberts-1970 Lea & Febiger, Philadelphia, 1970 Atlas Of The Human Brain In Section human
Operculum parietale Latin Roberts-1970 Lea & Febiger, Philadelphia, 1970 Atlas Of The Human Brain In Section human
opercolo parietale Italian Carpenter-1995 EdiSes, s.r.l.- Napoli, 1995 Fondamenti di Neuroanatomia human
opérculo parietal Spanish Carpenter-1994 edicion 4, Williams & Wilkins, Baltimore; traducción de Editorial Medica Panamericana, Buenos Aires, efectuada por el Dr. Alejandro Kaufman Neuroanatomía Fundamentos human
pao acronym NeuroNames University of Washington, Seattle, WA NeuroNames Unspecified
OPRpr acronym NeuroNames University of Washington, Seattle, WA NeuroNames Unspecified
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