Tela chorioidea

Tela chorioidea (or Tela choroidea) is a structure found in the ventricles of the brain:

Types include:

Tela choroidea of the lateral ventricle

Produces the choriodea fissure It is a double layered fold of pia mater intervening between:

  1. the body of the fornix (above).
  2. the upper surface of the two thalami and the roof of the 3rd ventricle (below).

It contains the choroid plexuses which invaginate into:

  1. The body of the each lateral ventricle through the choroid fissure (between the fornix and the thalamus).
  2. The 3rd ventricle through its ependymal roof.

It also contains the right and left internal cerebral veins (which drain the choroid plexuses) at its roof (the two veins unite to form the great cerebral vein).

The arteries carrying blood into the choroid plexuses are:

  1. the anterior choroidal artery (branch from the internal carotid).
  2. the posterior choroidal artery (branch from the posterior cerebral artery).

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