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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Cerebellar

Cerebellar \Cer`e*bel"lar\, Cerebellous \Cer`e*bel"lous\, a. (Anat.) of or pertaining to the cerebellum; as, the cerebellar artery.

Wiktionary
cerebellar

a. Of or pertaining to the cerebellum.

WordNet
cerebellar

adj. relating to or associated with the cerebellum; "cerebellar artery"

Wikipedia

Usage examples of "cerebellar".

Like the cerebrum, the cerebellum is divided into two portions by a longitudinal fissure, these portions being the cerebellar hemispheres.

L), Like the cerebrum, the cerebellum contains white matter within and the gray matter of the cell bodies occupies the surface, which is the cerebellar cortex.

The cerebellar cortex is more tightly wrinkled than the cerebral cortex, and its fissures lie in parallel lines.

Each cerebellar hemisphere is connected to the brain stem by three peduncles (peh-dung'kulz.

There's the usual crown-of-thorns, plus cerebellar and stem electrodes to integrate the brain with the cryonics system.

The body is vegetative, but Jeff Steinbrenner is confident that regen-tank tech­nology could replicate the germ plasm if we use external redactive input to augment the residue in the cerebellar network and the ner­vous system of the living body.

Balance is controlled by the cerebellar swarm, and rarely comes to consciousness.

These include: (1) significant anomalies throughout the neocortical regions and topical convolutionary conduits, (2) structural anomalies in the vascular and neural networks of the infundibulum, the pyramidal tracts, and the hippocampus, (3) pineal insufficiency, and (4) reticular imbalance of the pons and attendant cerebellar pathways.

This caused debilitating vertigo and extreme tinnitus, or a roaring in the ears, all culminating in a rupture of the anterior inferior cerebellar artery and causing hemorrhaging into the anterior and middle cranial fossae inside the base of the skull.

And this was an area where McCoy had some experience—the cerebellar bypass unit he’d devised as a “remote control” for Spock’s body when the Eymorgs had stolen his brain (ouch—that was not a sentence he wanted to think sober, let alone with a hangover) had been adapted in recent years as a means of treating paralysis patients who didn’t respond to standard nerve regen techniques.

When I have to sign his death certificate—something I’m pretty sure I’m going to have to handle in the next few hours—the proximate cause of death will be heart failure secondary to cerebellar dysfunction.

The body is vegetative, but Jeff Steinbrenner is confident that regen-tank technology could replicate the germ plasm if we use external redactive input to augment the residue in the cerebellar network and the nervous system of the living body.