Ventricular system
The
ventricular system is a fluid conducting system within the
brain. It is filled with
cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) that is largely composed of water. The ventricular system serves to bathe and cushion the brain and
spinal cord within their bony confines. The ventricular system consists of two large lateral ventricles in either cerebral hemisphere (roughly eye level within the skull) that extend into the temporal lobes (temporal horns), the small conduits of the third and fourth ventricles, and passage into the spinal cord. CSF surround the spinal cord and external cerebral cortex. CSF is produced by the choroid plexus within the ventricles themselves and is reabsorbed in the
subarachnoid space between brain and skull.
Diseases of the ventricular system include abnormal enlargement (hydrocephalus) and inflammation of the CSF caused by infection or introduction of blood following trauma or hemorrhage. Interestingly, scientific study of CAT scans of the ventricles in the late 1970s revolutionized the study of mental illness. Researchers found that patients with schizophrenia had enlarged ventricles compared to healthy subjects. This became the first "evidence" that mental illness was biological in origin and led to a reinvigoration of the study of such conditions via modern scientific techniques.