The fibers begin in the hippocampus on each side of the brain as
fimbriae; the separate left and right sides are each called the crus of the fornix (plural
crura). The bundles of fibers come together in the midline of the brain, forming the
body of the fornix. The lower edge of the
septum pellucidum (the membrane that separates the
lateral ventricles) is attached to the upper face of the fornix body. The body of the fornix travels anteriorly and divides again near the
anterior commissure. The left and right parts separate, but there is also an anterior/posterior divergence. • The posterior fibers (called the
postcommissural fornix) of each side continue through the
hypothalamus to the
mammillary bodies; then to the
anterior nuclei of thalamus via the
mammillothalamic tract. • The anterior fibers (
precommissural fornix) end at the
septal nuclei of the basal forebrain and
nucleus accumbens of each half of the brain.
Commissure The medial portions of the body of the fornix are joined by a thin triangular lamina, named the
psalterium (
lyra). This lamina contains some
commissural fibers that connect the two
hippocampi across the middle line and constitute the
commissure of fornix (also called the hippocampal
commissure). The terminal lamina creates the commissure plate. This structure gives existence to the corpus callosum, the septum pellucidum, and the fornix. The fornix splits into two columns at the front (anterior pillars), and then splits into two posterior crura. These two crura are joined together through the hippocampal commissure. The beginning of the splitting is called the psalterium or
Lyra Davidis. The latter name is used because the structure resembles a lyra (or triangular harp): The two crura are the "chassis" of the lyra, and the commissure connections are the fibers.
Columns The
columns (
anterior pillars;
fornicolumns) of the
fornix arch downward in front of the
interventricular foramina and behind the
anterior commissure, and each descends through the
grey matter in the lateral wall of the
third ventricle to the base of the brain, where it ends in the
mammillary bodies.
Crus The
crura (
posterior pillars) of the fornix are prolonged backward from the body. They are flattened bands, and, at their commencement, are intimately connected with the under surface of the
corpus callosum. Diverging from one another, each curves around the posterior end of the
thalamus, and passes downward and forward into the
temporal horn of lateral ventricle. Here, it lies along the concavity of the
hippocampus, on the surface of which some of its fibers are spread out to form the
alveus, while the remainder is continued as a narrow white band, the
fimbria of hippocampus, which is prolonged into the
uncus of the
parahippocampal gyrus. == Functional consequences of fornix damage ==