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brainstem
or brain stem
[ breyn-stem ]
noun
- the portion of the brain that is continuous with the spinal cord and comprises the medulla oblongata, pons, midbrain, and parts of the hypothalamus, functioning in the control of reflexes and such essential internal mechanisms as respiration and heartbeat.
brainstem
/ ˈbreɪnˌstɛm /
noun
- the stalklike part of the brain consisting of the medulla oblongata, the midbrain, and the pons Varolii
brainstem
/ brān′stĕm′ /
- The part of the vertebrate brain located at the base of the brain and made up of the medulla oblongata, pons, and midbrain. The brainstem controls and regulates vital body functions, including respiration, heart rate, and blood pressure.
- See also reticular formation
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Word History and Origins
Origin of brainstem1
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Example Sentences
The locus coeruleus, an area of the brainstem, synthesizes the stress hormone norepinephrine.
From Popular-Science
They knew how to trigger these retinal and brainstem neurons to pass electrical impulses—information, essentially—by projecting spots of light.
From Nautilus
You say we really have two brains—the brainstem and the cortex.
From Nautilus
The cortex borrows, as it were, its consciousness from the brainstem.
From Nautilus
He makes a convincing case for paying more attention to the “densely knotted core of the brainstem.”
From Washington Post
Brain death implies the complete and permanent absence of neurological function in the cortex and the brainstem.
From The Daily Beast
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