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The role of falx cerebri in the selective vulnerability of splenium within the corpus callosum

zhou, z.; kleiven, s.

2026-06-02 bioengineering
10.64898/2026.05.31.729036 bioRxiv
Show abstract

The corpus callosum is the largest white matter structure connecting the two cerebral hemispheres and is anatomically divided into three major subregions along the anteroposterior axis: the genu, midbody, and splenium. The splenium is frequently affected in traumatic head impacts, yet the biomechanical basis for this selective vulnerability remains poorly understood. Clinical studies have long hypothesized that the falx cerebri contributes to the splenial susceptibility because of its close anatomical relationship with the posterior corpus callosum, although direct verification is lacking. To address this, a high-resolution finite element head model with explicit representations of the genu, midbody, and splenium was employed. Two model variants, differing only in the presence or absence of an anatomically and mechanically detailed falx, were used to simulate ten head impacts covering a range of loading directions and severities. Peak strain, strain rate, and shear stress were quantified in each corpus callosum subregion and compared using linear mixed-effects models. The results showed that inclusion of the falx altered the regional distribution of mechanical responses within the corpus callosum. Across the simulated impacts, the splenium consistently exhibited greater strain, strain rate, and shear stress than the genu and midbody when the falx was present. In contrast, these preferentially larger splenial deformation were not consistently observed when the falx was absent. Statistical analyses demonstrated significant region-dependent effects of the falx, with falx-induced increases in strain, strain rate, and shear stress being significantly greater in the splenium than in the genu and midbody (p < 0.05). These findings verified the hypothesis that the falx selectively amplified mechanical loading within the splenium, thereby contributing to its heightened vulnerability to injury. This work provides a plausible biomechanical explanation for the frequent involvement of the splenium in brain trauma patients and highlights the heterogeneous influence of the falx on mechanical responses across corpus callosum subregions.

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