The
arachnoid mater is one of the three
meninges, the membranes that cover the
brain and
spinal cord. It is interposed between the two other meninges, the more superficial
dura mater and the deeper
pia mater, and is separated from the pia mater by the
subarachnoid space.
The delicate, spiderweb-like (therefore the name) arachnoid layer, attached to the inside of the dura, surrounds the brain and spinal cord but does not line the brain down into its sulci (folds). Cerebrospinal fluid flows under this membrane in the subarachnoid space, which is full of the delicate fibres of the arachnoid extending down to attach to the pia mater.
The portions covering the brain and spinal cord are called arachnoidea encephali and arachnoidea spinalis, respectively.
The arachnoid and pia mater are sometimes considered as a single structure, the leptomeninx, or the plural version, leptomeninges. (Lepto- from the root meaning thin in Greek). Similarly, the dura in this situation is called the pachymeninx.
Etymology
Arachnoid is from a Greek root, and means
cob web like. The
mater designation (meaning
mother in Latin) is borrowed from the
dura mater and
pia mater, which were Latin translations of Arabic terms. While
mater does not technically belong with the arachnoid layer, it has nevertheless been adopted by it for uniformity with the other meninges, and
arachnoid mater is currently the
Terminologia Anatomica international standard.
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