Anatomical studies on the ovine spinal cord.
Abstract
The root attachment lengths were consistently greater in the cranial cervical (C3), midthoracic (T7), caudal lumbar (L5) and cranial sacral (S1) cord segment levels than the corresponding caudal cervical, caudal thoracic, cranial lumbar and caudal sacral levels respectively. As to the root emergence length the greatest values were obtained bilaterally at C3, T1, L4 and S1 cord segment levels respectively. The interroot intervals were maximum at C3, T13, L1 and S1 cord levels in the respective regions. The longest cord segments were located at C2, T13, L3 and S1 levels; the shortest were at C8, T1, L6, and S4 cord levels. The greatest diameter and cross-sectional area were confined to the last cervical, first 2 thoracic, last lumbar and first sacral cord segment levels. The spinal cord segments C2, T13, L4 and S1 were most voluminous in the respective regions. The topography of cord segments and the level of termination of the spinal cord have been studied and recorded.