Lumbar enlargement

The lumbar enlargement (or lumbosacral enlargement) is a widened area of the spinal cord that gives attachment to the nerves which supply the lower limbs.It commences about the level of T11 and ends at L2, and reaches its maximum circumference, of about 33 mm.Inferior to the lumbar enlargement is the conus medullaris.[1] An analogous region for the upper limbs exists at the cervical enlargement.This article incorporates text in the public domain from page 752 of the 20th edition of Gray's Anatomy (1918)
Anatomical terminologynerveslower limbsconus medullariscervical enlargementpublic domainGray's AnatomySpinal cordFilum terminaleCauda equinaMeningesCentral canalTerminal ventricleGrey columnsPosterior grey columnMarginal nucleusSubstantia gelatinosa of RolandoNucleus propriusRexed lamina VRexed lamina VILateral grey columnIntermediolateral nucleusPosterior thoracic nucleusAnterior grey columnInterneuronAlpha motor neuronOnuf's nucleusGamma motor neuronRexed laminaeCentral gelatinous substanceGray commissureWhite matterPosteriorPosterior column-medial lemniscus pathwayGracileCuneateLateralSpinocerebellardorsalventralSpinothalamicanteriorPosterolateralSpinotectalSpinoreticular tractSpino-olivary tractCorticospinalExtrapyramidalRubrospinalRaphespinalHypothalamospinalVestibulospinalTectospinalOlivospinalAnterior white commissureAnterior median fissureAnterolateral sulcusPosterior median sulcusPosterolateral sulcusneuroscience