Spinal canal

Changed by Craig Hacking, 1 Oct 2019

Updates to Article Attributes

Body was changed:

The spinal canal, also known as the vertebral canal, is the cavity within the vertebral column which contains the spinal cord.

Gross anatomy

The spinal canal becomes progressively narrower from its superior opening at the foramen magnum to its inferior opening at the sacral hiatus 1. The canal itself is primarily formed by the vertebral foramen of adjacent vertebrae. Allowing for variation, the spinal cord occupies the superior two-thirds of the spinal canal and terminates at approximately the middle of the L1 vertebral body 2.

The canal has a typical shape depending on it's level:

Boundaries
Contents

Related pathology

  • -<![endif]--><!--StartFragment-->The <strong>spinal canal</strong>, also known as the <strong>vertebral canal</strong>, is the cavity within the <a href="/articles/spinal-anatomy-1">vertebral column</a> which contains the <a href="/articles/spinal-cord">spinal cord</a>.</p><h4>Gross anatomy</h4><p>The spinal canal becomes progressively narrower from its superior opening at the <a href="/articles/foramen-magnum">foramen magnum</a> to its inferior opening at the <a href="/articles/sacral-hiatus">sacral hiatus</a> <sup>1</sup>. The canal itself is primarily formed by the vertebral foramen of adjacent vertebrae. Allowing for variation, the spinal cord occupies the superior two-thirds of the spinal canal and terminates at approximately the middle of the L1 vertebral body <sup>2</sup>.</p><p>The canal has a typical shape depending on it's level </p><ul>
  • +<![endif]--><!--StartFragment-->The <strong>spinal canal</strong>, also known as the <strong>vertebral canal</strong>, is the cavity within the <a href="/articles/spinal-anatomy-1">vertebral column</a> which contains the <a href="/articles/spinal-cord">spinal cord</a>.</p><h4>Gross anatomy</h4><p>The spinal canal becomes progressively narrower from its superior opening at the <a href="/articles/foramen-magnum">foramen magnum</a> to its inferior opening at the <a href="/articles/sacral-hiatus">sacral hiatus</a> <sup>1</sup>. The canal itself is primarily formed by the vertebral foramen of adjacent vertebrae. Allowing for variation, the spinal cord occupies the superior two-thirds of the spinal canal and terminates at approximately the middle of the L1 vertebral body <sup>2</sup>.</p><p>The canal has a typical shape depending on it's level:</p><ul>
  • -<li>posterior: posterior longitudinal ligament, <a href="/articles/ligamentum-flavum">ligamentum flavum</a>
  • -</li>
  • -<li>lateral: vertebral pedicles <sup>1</sup>
  • +<li>posterior: <a href="/articles/ligamentum-flavum">ligamentum flavum</a> lining the laminae</li>
  • +<li>lateral: <a title="Vertebra" href="/articles/vertebra">vertebral pedicles</a> <sup>1</sup>

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