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    • Opening or hole through tissue

      • A foramen (plural foramina) is an opening or hole through tissue, usually bone. It allows nerves and blood vessels to travel from one side of the tissue layer to the other.
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  1. Sep 24, 2020 · A foramen (plural foramina) is an opening or hole through tissue, usually bone. It allows nerves and blood vessels to travel from one side of the tissue layer to the other. Foramina are primarily found in the skull; others are located in the vertebrae, long bones, roots of the teeth, heart, and abdomen.

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  3. Oct 30, 2023 · The intervertebral foramen is an oval-shaped opening formed between the pedicles of two adjacent vertebrae of the vertebral column. The pedicles of each vertebra bear small indentations on their superior and inferior aspects called the superior and inferior vertebral notches respectively.

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  4. Jul 21, 2021 · Foramen is an anatomical term that refers to any opening in the body of animals, including humans. It is an opening especially through a bone, and serves as a passage to muscle s, nerve s, blood vessel s or other structures that connect with another body part.

  5. Oct 30, 2023 · The vertebral foramen is an opening within individual vertebrae of the vertebral column. Its anterior boundary is formed by the posterior aspect of the vertebral body and its posterolateral boundary is formed by the vertebral arch.

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  6. Jan 17, 2023 · A foramen (plural: foramina ) is an opening inside the body that allows key structures to connect one part of the body to another. The skull bones that contain foramina include the frontal, ethmoid, sphenoid, maxilla, palatine, temporal, and occipital. There are 21 foramina in the human skull.

  7. The large opening between the vertebral arch and body is the vertebral foramen, which contains the spinal cord. In the intact vertebral column, the vertebral foramina of all of the vertebrae align to form the vertebral (spinal) canal, which serves as the bony protection and passageway for the spinal cord down the back.

  8. The spongy bone and medullary cavity receive nourishment from arteries that pass through the compact bone. The arteries enter through the nutrient foramen (plural = foramina), small openings in the diaphysis (Figure 6.3.10). The osteocytes in spongy bone are nourished by blood vessels of the periosteum that penetrate spongy bone and blood that ...

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