Schizophrenia damages the frontal and temporal lobes and the vesicles.
The frontal lobes, the temporal lobes, and the vesicles are affected.
The three primary brain vesicles are the prosencephalon (forebrain), mesencephalon (midbrain), and the rhombencephalon (hindbrain). These vesicles further develop into the different regions of the mature brain during embryonic development.
Primary lysosomes are newly formed vesicles containing digestive enzymes, while secondary lysosomes are formed when primary lysosomes fuse with endocytic vesicles containing material to be digested. Essentially, primary lysosomes are the initial structures while secondary lysosomes are the active, digestive forms.
The main visible pathological change is that the vesicles enlarge.
The cerebrum develops from the telencephalon, which is one of the five vesicles of the embryonic brain. It is the largest part of the brain and is responsible for higher brain functions such as thinking, memory, and voluntary movements.
secondary follicle
Secondary intracranial tumors arise from outside the brain coverings (meninges)
With your brain.
cordinates the reflecsive movements,senses of touching and hearing
The MRI would detect enlarged vesicles.
The spelling "vesicles" refers to sacs or cysts in animal anatomy, notably the seminal vesicles that provide fluid to carry semen.