Lobe (anatomy)
Lobes | |
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Visceral surface of the liver showing the four lobes | |
In anatomy, a lobe is a clear anatomical division or extension[1] of an organ (as seen for example in the brain, the lung, liver or the kidney) that can be determined without the use of a microscope at the gross anatomy level. This is in contrast to the much smaller lobule, which is a clear division only visible under the microscope.[2]
Interlobar ducts connect lobes and interlobular ducts connect lobules.
Examples of lobes
- The four lobes of the human cerebral cortex
- the frontal lobe
- the parietal lobe
- the occipital lobe
- the temporal lobe
- The three lobes of the human cerebellum
- the flocculonodular lobe
- the anterior lobe
- the posterior lobe
- The two lobes of the thymus
- The two and three lobes of the lungs
- Left lung: superior and inferior
- Right lung: superior, middle, inferior
- The four lobes of the liver
- The renal lobes of the kidney
Examples of lobules
- the cortical lobules of the kidney
- the testicular lobules
- the lobules of the mammary gland
- the lobules of the lung
- the lobules of the thymus
References
- ↑ lobe at eMedicine Dictionary
- ↑ SIU SOM Histology GI
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