Cerebellum (“little brain”)
1. General and regional organization
2. Internal structure of the cerebellum:
        grey matter – cerebellar cortex & deep cerebellar nuclei
        white matter – “arbor vitae”
3. Afferent and efferent cerebellar connections
4. Cerebellar functions and dysfunctions
                                                                    Cerebellum
                    Cerebellum – gross anatomy
 Regional location:
        posterior cranial fossa, covered by cerebellar tentorium
        beneath the occipital lobes of cerebral hemispheres
        behind the pons and medulla oblongata
        roof of the fourth ventricle
 Connections with brainstem structures
    (three paired fiber bundles – peduncles):
      midbrain – superior cerebellar peduncle
       (brachium conjunctivum)
      pons – middle cerebellar peduncle
       (brachium pontis)
      medulla – inferior cerebellar peduncle
       (restiform body)
   average weight ~130 g (10% of the total brain volume)
   cerebellum:cerebrum = 1:8 (adult); 1:20 (infant)
   more than 50% of all neurons in the brain
   origin: embryonic hindbrain (rhombencephalon)
   major integrative center for the coordination
                            of muscular activity
    Prof. Dr. Nikolai Lazarov                                             2
                                                  Cerebellum
                      Cerebellum – divisions
 three sagital subdivisions:
     median portion, cerebellar vermis
     two lateral parts, cerebellar hemispheres
 three transverse subdivisions (lobes):
     anterior lobe
     posterior lobe
     flocculonodular lobe
Prof. Dr. Nikolai Lazarov                               3
                                                           Cerebellum
             Cerebellum – surface topography
 Foliar pattern:
     folia cerebelli (transverse leaf-like laminae)
 Cerebellar fissures:
       fissura prima – V-shaped
       horizontal fissure
       pre- and postpyramidal fissure (fissura secunda)
       posterolateral fissure
 Vermis lobules:
     superior surface:
          lingula
          central lobule
          monticulus:
              • culmen
              • declive
          folium vermis
     inferior surface:
            tuber vermis
            pyramid
            uvula
            nodule
  Prof. Dr. Nikolai Lazarov                                      4
                                       Cerebellum
           Cerebellum – surface topography
 Hemisphere lobules:
    superior surface:
         (vinculum lingulae)
         alae of the central lobule
         anterior
          quadrangular lobule
         lobulus simplex
          (posterior
          quadrangular lobule)
         superior semilunar lobule
    inferior surface:
         inferior semilunar lobule
         gracile lobule
          (paramedianus)
         biventral lobule
         tonsil
         flocculus
  Prof. Dr. Nikolai Lazarov                  5
                                                        Cerebellum
             Phylogenetic and functional divisions
 Archicerebellum:
    flocculonodular lobe = flocculus + nodulus
     (+ part of uvula)
    functionally related to maintenance of balance:
     vestibulocerebellum
 Paleocerebellum:
    anterior lobe = lingula, central lobule, culmen,
     pyramid, uvula (of vermis) + quadrangular
     lobules (of cerebellar hemispheres)
    regulates body and limb movements,
     involved in control of muscle tone
     via the spinal cord: spinocerebellum
 Neocerebellum:
    posterior lobe = the rest of cerebellum
    most concerned with planning movement and
     coordination of somatic motor function:
      cerebrocerebellum (pontocerebellum)
   Prof. Dr. Nikolai Lazarov                                  6
                                         Cerebellum
               Cerebellum – internal structure
 grey matter:
    cerebellar cortex,
     cortex cerebelli
    intracerebellar (deep) nuclei,
     nuclei cerebelli
 white matter,
  medullary substance
  (corpus medullare):
    primary laminae –
      “arbor vitae” (tree of life)
    intrinsic fibers,
      fibrae propriae
    projection fibers
    myelinated axons
      of the Purkinje cells
    afferent fibers –
      ‘climbing’ and ‘mossy’
  Prof. Dr. Nikolai Lazarov                      7
                                                                   Cerebellum
                            Cerebellar cortex
                              Molecular layer, stratum moleculare – 300-400 µm:
                                  outer stellate neurons and basket cells (GABA)
                                  Fañanás glial cells (astrocytes) – feather-like
                              Purkinje cell layer,
                               stratum purkinjense:
                                  Purkinje cells
                                  Bergmann
                                   glial cells
                                                          Granular layer,
                                                           stratum granulosum
                                                             – 100 µm:
                                                               granule cells – 1011
                                                                 (Glu)
                                                               Golgi type II cells
                                                                 (GABA)
Prof. Dr. Nikolai Lazarov                                                     8
                                                                   Cerebellum
                                  Purkinje cells
 large flask-shaped – 50-80 µm in diameter
 most numerous (15x106) neurons in CNS
 large number of dendritic spines (170000/cell)
 dendritic tree arborizations in the transverse
  plan to the long axis of the folium
 Purkinje cell axons – inhibitory synaptic
  contacts with deep cerebellar nuclei
 GABAergic inhibitory neurons                     J.E. Purkinje
                                                   (1787-1869)
   Prof. Dr. Nikolai Lazarov                                             9
                                                       Cerebellum
                  Cortical inputs – afferent fibers
 climbing fibers:
    originate from the inferior olivary nucleus
    direct excitatory contacts with Purkinje cells
 mossy fibers:
    excitatory synaptic contacts with granule cells
    rosettes  cerebellar glomerulus
  Prof. Dr. Nikolai Lazarov                                  10
                                           Cerebellum
                      Deep cerebellar nuclei
 Dentate nucleus, nucleus dentatus
 Interpositus nucleus:
     emboliform nucleus,
      nucleus emboliformis
     globose nucleus,
      nucleus globosus
 Fastigial nucleus,
  nucleus fastigii
Prof. Dr. Nikolai Lazarov                        11
                                                                   Cerebellum
             Cerebellar input: afferent pathways
 pedunculus cerebellaris inferior:             archicerebellum, paleocerebellum
       tractus spinocerebellaris posterior
       tractus bulbocerebellaris
                                                neocerebellum
       tractus vestibulocerebellaris            paleocerebellum
       tractus olivocerebellaris
 pedunculus cerebellaris medius:
     tractus pontocerebellaris
 pedunculus cerebellaris superior:
     tractus spinocerebellaris anterior
     tractus reticulocerebellaris
                            nearly 200 million input fibers
Prof. Dr. Nikolai Lazarov                                                   12
                                             Cerebellum
            Cerebellar output: efferent pathways
nucleus dentatus, emboliformis et globosus
 pedunculus cerebellaris superior:
    tractus cerebellorubralis
    tractus cerbellothalamicus
    tractus cerebelloreticularis
            nucleus fastigii
 pedunculus cerebellaris inferior:
     tractus cerebelloolivaris
     tractus cerebellovestibularis
  Prof. Dr. Nikolai Lazarov                        13
                                                     Cerebellum
                               Cerebellar circuits
 Cortico-cerebellar circuitry:
     tractus corticopontini
     tractus pontocerebellaris
     tractus dentato-rubro-thalamocorticalis
 Trunco-cerebellar circuitry:
     tractus rubroolivaris
     tractus olivocerebellaris
     tractus cerebellorubralis
 Vestibulo-archicerebellar circuitry:
     tractus vestibulocerebellaris
     tractus cerebellovestibularis
   Prof. Dr. Nikolai Lazarov                               14
                                                                 Cerebellum
                         Cerebellar dysfunctions
 Neocerebellar disturbances:
    hypotonia (decreased muscle tone)
    asynergia (diminished capacity for smooth, cooperative,
      sequential action between a series of muscle groups)
    cerebellar ataxia (disequilibrium&incoordination
      of willed movements)
    intention tremor (wide tremor during voluntary movements)
    nystagmus (inability to fixate an object with the eyes)
 Archicerebellar disturbances :
    trunk (truncal) ataxia
    vertigo
      (dizziness: a whirling or spinning movement)
 Paleocerebellar disturbances:
    hypotonia
    dyskinesia (presence of involuntary movements)
  Prof. Dr. Nikolai Lazarov                                            15
                            Thank you…
Prof. Dr. Nikolai Lazarov                16