PONS
PONS
PONS
(Bridge,L)
Pons
The middle part of the
brainstem.
Situated in the posterior
cranial fosa on the clivus
(formed by union of basi-
sphenoid and basi-
occiput).
Connected to cerebellum
by two middle cerebellar
peduncles.
PONS in MRI
Expanding lesions of clivus can invade the pons
parts
P
Internal structure
Grey matter and white matter
The structure of basis pontis is similar
throughout the pons.
Tegmentum on the other hand, differs in
structure in the upper and lower halves.
Grey matter and white matter
Pontine nuclei.
Nuclei of V,VI,VII and VIII cranial nerves.
Pontine respiratory center.
White matter contains ascending and
descending tracts and transverse ponto
cerebellar fibers.
Structure of basis pontis
(white matter)
Longitudinal fibers (corticopontine,corticonuclear
and corticospinal fibers).
Corticopontine fibers relay in ipsilateral pontine
nuclei.
Corticonuclear fibers terminate mainly in
contralateral motor nuclei of cranial nerves.
Corticospinal fibers descend to form pyramids of
medulla.
Transverse fibers
Arise in the pontine nuclei and pass to the
opposite cerebellar hemisphere and form
ponto cerebellar fibers.
The pontine nuclei form an important part
of the cortco-ponto-cerebellar pathway,
connecting the cerebral cortex of one side
to the cerebellar hemisphere of the
opposite side.
IV
VI
Neurobiotaxis
Other nuclei in tegmentum
Superior and inferior
salivatory nuclei.
4 vestibular and 2 cochlear
nuclei.
Spinal tract and its nucleus
of V on their way to
midbrain above.
White matter at this level
contains trapezoid body
(fibers from cochlear
nuclei), medial lemniscus
(becomes transverse),
MLF and tectospinal tracts.
Medial lemniscus
In medulla
T.S. Through upper pons
Main features are:
Sensory and motor nuclei of V
Lateral lemniscus along with other
lemnisci
T.S THROUGH UPPER PONS
Main structural differences in tegmentum at two levels