Actually, its the foramina of Monro, not Monroe. They are channels that connect the paired lateral ventricles with the third ventricle at the midline of the brain.
It is a median cleft between the two thalami, and is filled with cerebrospinal fluid. It is in the midline, between the left and right lateral ventricles. Running through the third ventricle is the Interthalamic adhesion, fibers which connect the two thalami.
The third and forth ventricles are connected by the Cerebral aqueduct which emerges from the mid brain
lateral ventricle
The largest ventricle of the brain are the lateral ventricles. In both of the brain's hemispheres there are c-shaped ventricles in the telencephalon.
The lateral ventricles are in the brain and connect to the third ventricle through the foreman of Monroe.
Fluid flows from the third ventricle, through the cerebral aqueduct (also known as the aqueduct of Sylvius), into the fourth ventricle in the brain.
The fourth ventricle of the brain lies between the cerebellum and the brain stem. This i next to the third ventricle, which divides the left and right halves of the thalamus.
lateral ventricle, third ventricles, fourth ventricles, and cerebral aqueduct
Actually, its the foramina of Monro, not Monroe. They are channels that connect the paired lateral ventricles with the third ventricle at the midline of the brain.
The cerebral aqueduct connects the third and fourth ventricles in the brain.
cerebral aquaduct!!!
The foramen of Monro connect the lateral ventricles with the third ventricle.
It is a median cleft between the two thalami, and is filled with cerebrospinal fluid. It is in the midline, between the left and right lateral ventricles. Running through the third ventricle is the Interthalamic adhesion, fibers which connect the two thalami.
The cerebral aqueduct is the narrow conduit, between the third and the fourth ventricles in the midbrain, that conveys the cerebrospinal fluid and thereby prevents its potentially deadly buildup in the brain. Also called the aqueduct of Sylvius.
The third ventricle
The third and forth ventricles are connected by the Cerebral aqueduct which emerges from the mid brain