frontomarginal sulcus (fms)

The term frontomarginal sulcus (fms) refers to a superficial feature of the human frontal lobe (FLB). It is a cleft on the orbital surface very near the frontal pole (frp) that separates the frontomarginal gyrus (FMG) from the middle frontal gyrus (MFG) ( Ono-1990 Mai-1997 ). It is a topological feature not found in the macaque, rat or mouse ( NeuroNames ). Updated 5 Sep 2024.

Also known as: frontomarginal sulcus, Sulcus fronto-marginalis

NeuroNames ID: 1614

All Names & Sources

Showing 4 synonym(s)

Name:

frontomarginal sulcus

Language:

English

Organism:

human

Source:

Ono-1990

Citation:

Atlas of the Cerebral Sulci, Thieme Medical Publishers, Inc., New York, 1990.

Source Title:

Atlas of the Cerebral Sulci

Name:

Sulcus fronto-marginalis

Language:

Latin

Organism:

human

Source:

Mai-1997

Citation:

San Diego: Academic Press, 1997

Source Title:

Atlas of the Human Brain

Name:

sillon frontomarginal

Language:

French

Organism:

human

Citation:

Springer-Verlag, Paris, 1992

Source Title:

Le cerveau humain: Surface, coupes seriees tridimensionnelles et IRM

Name:

fms

Language:

acronym

Organism:

human

Source:

Mai-1997

Citation:

San Diego: Academic Press, 1997

Source Title:

Atlas of the Human Brain

No illustrations found

No illustrations available for this concept.

Species With The Structure
Equivalent By Human Macaque Rat Mouse
Topology Has The Structure Relevant Data Not Located Relevant Data Not Located Relevant Data Not Located

Showing 2 record(s)

Basis:

Topology

Has Equivalent:

Yes

Their Name:

frontomarginal sulcus

Source:

Ono-1990

Basis:

Topology

Has Equivalent:

Yes

Their Name:

Sulcus fronto-marginalis

Source:

Mai-1997

No models found

No models available for this concept.