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Question Answer
sensory isafferent
motor isefferent
both lmn have the samepathway. cord to skeletal muscle
separates motor and sensory areascentral sulcus
separates the 2 cerebral hemisphereslongitudinal cerebral fissure
partitions of dura mater comprised of what 3 thingsfalx Cerebri, falx cerebelli, falx tentorium cerebelli
? separates the cerebral hemispheresfalx cerebri
? separates the 2 cerebellar hemispheresfalx cerebelli
? separates the cerebral cortex above and the cerebellum belowtentorium cerebelli
basement membrane also calledneurolemma/or endoneurium. found only in pns
connective tissue cells of the nervous system, don't conduct impulses, nervous system matures due to an increase in these cells. most numerous in the nervous systemneurolglial cells
3 diff neuroglial cells in cnsoligodendroglia, astocytes, microglia
smaller fewere, some are around axon, some in rows, between nerve fibers to hold fibers togetheroligodendroglia
produce multiple myelin segments (covers nerve fibers in brain and cord)oligodendroglia
? disease of oligodenmultiple sclerosis
largest form sheath around brain capillaries; involved with brain barrier; allow nutrients in, waste out; produce scar tissue where CNS tissue removedastrocytes
small stationary cells, brain inflamed, phago microbes and cell debrismicroglia
form epithelial lining for fluid-filled ventricles of brain for central canal of cordependymal cells
around cell bodies in the PNS, in ganglia so supportive and physical barrier functionsatellite cells
? found only in nerves of body (PNS), form basement membrane and myelin sheath, can regenerate because of 2nd coveringSchwann cells
? controls motorfrontal
? controls sensoryparietal
? controls hearingtemporal
? controls visionoccipital
? controls emotions and memorylimbic
? controls somatic and visceral functioninsula
dorsal =posterior
ventral =anterior
input to cord is by incoming sensory in the...posterior root of spinal nerve
the sensory cell body is located in the ?posterior root ganglia = swelling near cord
afferent synapse occurs in the ?posterior horn of the gray matter
? these neurons synapse with incoming and outgoing neuronsinterneurons
out put from the ant horn of the gray matter is by themotor or efferent neurons out the ant root of the spinal nerve
consists of tracts or columns (asced/desced)white matter
conduct pain temp, crude touch, tickle, itch and sex sens to thalamuslat spinothalamic tracts
conduct pain temp, crude touch, tickle, itch and sex sens from cord to thalamusant spinothalamic tracts
post columns for discriminating touch, and proprioceptionfasciculi gracilis and cuneatus
sensory component of the muscular system, sense of movement and body partsproprioception
for unconscious kinesthesiaspinocerebellar tracts
impulses down the cord from the brain aremotor
axons from cell bodies in the cerebral cortex to the cord, for precise discrete, voluntary movement on the opposite side of bodylateral corticospinal tracts
lateral corticospinal tracts cross in themedulla pyramids
ant corticospinal tractsaxons from cell bodies in the cerebral cortex to the cord, for precise discrete, voluntary movement on the opposite side of body
ant corticospinal tracts cross inthe cord
lat reticulspinal tractsfacilitatory impulses to ant gray horn motoneurons to skeletal muscles
medial reticulspinal tractsinhibitory impulses to ant gray horn motoneurons to skeletal muscles
surround the cordmeninges
collagenous conn tissue, stong durabledura matter
true epidural space around the dura of thespinal cord, not the brain, dura attaches to bone
arachnoid membraneencloses the subarachnoid space
subarachnoid space is filled withcsf
covers organs of the cns and extends beyond the cord to anchor it, carries blood vessels into the brain and cord, inner mostpia mater
denticulate ligaments ?thickening of Pia that fuses with arachnoid + dura mater that projects laterally b/n spinal nerve roots and protects against shock and sudden displacement
? where cord endsat lumbar 2 vertebrae
spinal nerve C8 merges ?between C7 and T1
how is CSF formed?by the filtration of blood in the choroid plexuses
choroid plexuses?network of capillaries from the Pia Mater into the ventricles
how does CSF travel?from lateral ventricles to the the interventricular foramen into 3rd ventricles into Cerebral Aqueduct of Sylvius into 4th ventricle, then into central canal of the cord and subarachnoid spaces
how is CSF absorbed?absorbed back into the blood thru the Arachnoid Villi (granulations) into venous sinuses
what is the purpose of CSF?functions as a protective cushion
Glutamic acid and Aspartic acid =excitatory NT
GABA and Glycine =inhibitory NT
Norepinephrine =monoamine for arousal
dopamine =monoamine for movement and emotions
Enkephalins and Endorphins =body opiates that inhibit pain
Substance P =body opiate that controls pain in the cord
most common NT =Acetylcholine (ACh)
where are NTs synthesized?axon terminals by enzymes
NTs are stored in...axon terminals
? cerebellum receives a lot of input from...vestibular system (inner ear). Also propeoceptors, cortex, and reticular system
Cerebullum functions:coordinates and controls smooth muscle movement and postural and equilibrium reflexes
Damage of cerebellum causes:ataxia, rebound, dysmetria, intention tremors, gait problems
ataxia is...muscle incoordination
rebound is...loss of antagonistic muscle coordination
dysmetria is...improper distance measuring
intention tremors are...when voluntary movement is attempted
Diencephalon is located ?between the Cerebrum and Midbrain
Diencephalon is comprised of ?the Thalaums and Hypothalamus
Thalamus is ?large, rounded mass of gray matter lateral to 3rd ventricle, 1 in each hemisphere.
Function of Thalamus is ? (4 of them)major sensory relay center= recognizes pain, heat, cold, touch, and pressure; involved in expressing emotions associated with sensations; partly involved in arousal and alerting mechanisms and complex reflex movement.
Function of Hypothalamus is ? (8 of them)regulates and coordinates the ANS, regulates pituitary's function, regulates temp, regulates water balance by checking blood's osmotic pressure, controls food intake, regulates gastric secretions, emotional expression of rage, anger, and sexual behavior,
Structure of Hypothalamus:includes gray matter around the optic chiasm, pituitary stalk, posterior lobe of the pituitary, mamillary bodies, and adjacent regions.
CN1olfactory; smell; sensory
CN2optic; sight; sensory
CN3oculomotor; eye movement and focusing; motor
CN4trochlear; eye movement and focusing; motor
CN5trigeminal; sensory for head and neck, face and chewing; sensory and motor
CN6abducens; eye movement and focusing; motor
CN7facial; taste (ant. 2/3 of tongue) and face muscles and glands; sensory and motor
CN8acoustic/vestibular cochlear; hearing and posture, balance; sensory
CN9glossopharyngeal; swallowing and taste (posterior 1/3 of tongue); motor and sensory
CN10vagus; important in ANS, sensory, and motor to all thoracic and abdominal viscera; sensory and motor
CN11accessory; swallowing and head movement; motor
CN12hypoglossal; swallowing and speech; motor
Reticular Activating System comprised of...Thalamus, Hypothalamus, Amygdaloid Nuclei
Function of Reticular Activating System?Center for arousal/alerting, associated w/ levels of consciousness; all sensory systems have some input; anesthetics act by lowering levels of consciousness.
speech area?Broca
damage in Broca causes?aphasia
Aphasia is?inability to speak or write (but Broca aphasia able to understand)
Auditory area?Wernicke's
damage in Wernicke's causes?inability to speak or write, no comprehension
? PNS supportive cellssatellite cell, Schwann cell, connective tissue
CNS involves what 2 areas?brain and spinal cord
PNS involves what 2 areas?ganglia and nerves
functional cell ofboth CNS and PNS?neuron
supportive cells of CNS?astrocyte, oligodendrocyte, microglial (neuroglia)
cell bodies of CNS?nucleus
cell bodies of PNS?ganglion
bundles of axons in CNS?tracts
bundles of axons in PNS?nerves
Epineurium?around the entire nerve (PNS only)
Perineurium?around the fasciculus (bundle of neurons); PNS only
Endoneurium?around one neuron (also called basement membrane and neurolemma); PNS only
? most numerous cell of nervous systemneuroglial
? CNS supportive cellsneuroglial cells
? microgliadoesn't exist normally in the brain; derived from mesoderm, a phagocyte, it only appears when there is a lesion in the nervous system
the CNS cannot regenerate because...no basement membrane
? neural tube becomesCNS
? neural crest becomesPNS
maturation of the cerebral cortex in child development is due to...an increase of glial cells
plasticity is...the ability to develop new synapses and new circuits as part of the learning process
Myelination is not fully developed as an infant, therefore...walking and developing motor skills take time
? there is no connective tissue inCNS
? connects the cerebral cortex to the brain steminternal capsule (strokes occur here)
if frontal lobe is destroyed...total paralysis on opposite side of body
all conscious function is in the...cortex
the Central Sulcus divides the...Precentral gyrus (anterior;motor) and Postcentral gyrus (posterior, area for all sensations of the body); divides the frontal from the parietal lobes, motor vs. sensory areas
? the brain is ___ to paininsensitive
___ is sensitive to paindura
CSF travel:lateral- 3rd- cerebral aqueduct- 4th- subarachnoid space
Conus Medullaris"V" tip of the cord
Cauda Equina"tail" of nerves that extend past the cord
Filum TerminalePia anchors cord to the posterior side of coccyx
Coccygeal LigamentFilum Terminale anchors to this
Muscle spindleslocated in the muscle for reflexes (stretch) and also tells movement and speed
Joint capsule receptorstells the position of the joints
bare (free) nerve endingsreceptors for pain that respond to tissue damage
Dorsal root ganglioncell bodies of sensory (afferent) neurons
trigeminal ganglioncell bodies associated with sensory info for the head and neck
substantia gelantinosapain control for spinal pathways; gelatin substance in the posterior horn of the cord; processing center
subnucleus caudalispain control for cranial pathways
medial lemniscusprojection tract for the 2nd neuron for discriminating touch and proprioception; travels from medulla to thalamus
majority are these? in CNS everywhere? in PNS in autonomic ganglia?mulipolar neuron
? functions for large automatic movement of skeletal muscle and muscle toneextrapyramidal system
descending motor tracts...Rubrospinal, Tectospinal, Vestibulospinal
Contralateral functions...opposite sides
Sequential movementsas in writing
Substantia Nigra...subconscious muscle activity
Striatum...caudate and putamen
Parasympatheticcraniosacral division; functioning under "normal" conditions
CN ganglia...cranial nerves 3,7,9, 10
Sympatheticthoracolumbar division (T1 to L3); "flight or flight" division; major function; vasoconstriction
Chain and other ganglia...sympathetic chain ganglion runs parallel to spinal cord
Pilomotor...there is a muscle going to the hair making it stand on end
Secretory...glands
Vasomotor...blood vessels
Satellite cell?blood brain barrier; phsycial metabolic nutrients in, waste out
Schwann cell?produces myelin and basement membrane; neurolemma and phagocytic degenerated axons
? 3 groups of collagen fibersepi-, peri-, endoneurium
? each fascicle surrounded by thicker collagen calledperineurium
surrounding axon?myelin sheath
surrounding myelin sheath?basement membrane
innermost connective tissue?basement membrane
basement membrane secreted by?Schwann cell
? peri- and endoneurium are ______ for stretchwavy
? enlargement along the length of a tube (also contains NTs)varicosity
? phagocytesmicroglia
? forms multiple myelin segmentsoligodendrocytes
brain grows faster than...cranial vault (folds over itself)
? bundles of axonsnerves
? group of cell bodiesganglia
2 areas of the spine that are enlarged...cervical and lumbar
fiber bundles under...gray matter
? subcortical matterwhite matter
? mostly involved in strokesmiddle cerebral
? drains the face, so infections can drain to meningescavernous sinus
associated w/ pain control in the spine:substantia gelatinosa
associated with pain control in the cranial nerve:subnucleus caudalis
Vestibular input?from the semicircular canals in the ear for equilibrium
Proprioceptors input?from the sensory component in muscles
Upper motor neuron damage causes...spastic paralysis and increased reflexes
Lower motor neuron damage causes...flaccid paralysis and decreased reflexes
Extrapyramidal (basal ganglia) damage causes...tremor at rest (Parkinson's) and involuntary movements (Chorea)
Cerebellum damage includes...ataxia (failure of muscle coordination), rebound (loss of antagonist muscle coordination), dysmetria (improper distance measuring), intention tremor (arises or intensifies when a voluntary coordinated movement is attempted)
ANS regulates...visceral effectors (smooth and cardiac muscle, glands) to maintain or restore homeostasis
ANS is influenced by impulses from...frontal lobe and limbic system
what releases ACh?pre and post-ganglionic parasympathetic and pre-ganglionic sympathetic
what releases NE?post-ganglionic sympathetic
main function of sympathetic division?vasoconstriction
parasympathetic functions:dominates control of most visceral effectors (smooth and cardiac muscles and glands)
? under normal conditionsparasympathetic
? under fight or flightsympathetic
parasympathetic is associated with 4 CNs...3, 7, 9, 10
sympathetic division orthoracolumbar division, output travels with spinal verves t1 to l3
somatic nervous systemsupplies skin and skeletal muscles
has 1 neuron between cns and the effectorsomatic nervous system
has 2 neurons between cns and the effectorans
ans supplieseffector, glands,cardiac,smooth muscles/ no skeletal muscle control
upper motor neuron involvespyramidal neuron/cerebral cortex
lower motor neuron involvesbrainstem and spinal cord
what are the 3 tracts assoc. with direct pthwylat corticospinal, ant corticospinal, corticobulbar
corticobulbar terminates in the nuclei of cn3,4,,5,6,7,9-12
extrapyramidal system or ?, involved withbasal ganglia, cortical assoc with sequential movement and automatic movement, walking, laughing and muscle tone/indirect
the umn begins in thenuclei of brain stem
corticospinal tract is completelycontralateral to the opposite trunk and limbs
pyramidal involved indirect pthwy for precise voluntary mvmnt
equilibrium sensingvestibular organs
proprioceptorsinformation of what is happening in joints and muscles (spinocerebellar tracts)
info on what movmnts are plannedcerebral cortex
saying for cnon old olympus towering tops a fin and german viewed awesome hops
sensory/motor sayingsome say marry for money but my brother says big boobs matter more
ipsilateralcerebellar
contralateralis cortex
conducts impulses to cord or brainafferent,sensory
conducts impulses away from cord/brainefferent/motor
receptorend of sensory nerve
effectorskeletal muscle
where are most synapsesaxodendritic
bipolar1 axon, 1 dendrite, associated with special senses=vision hearing, smell vestibular/balance
multipolar1 axon, several dendrites (most numerous)
unipolar1 process comes off neuron, divides into axon, 1 dendrite always sensory, in pns (ex. cell bodies are in the dorsal (posterior)root ganglion of the spinal nerves)
ascending issensory
descending ismotor
parts of reflex2 styles: sensory and motor or sensory to interneuron to motor
internal carotid artery joinsthe circle of willis
basilar arteryjoins the circle of willis
circle of willislocated at the base of the brain (inferior aspect)
travel in the cervical vertebrae's transverse foramen and then together form the basilar artery at the base of the brainvertebral arteries
dermatomearea innervated by specific nerve,
white matter consists ofmyelinated fibers (high in fat)
gray matter is a cluster ofcell bodies
brain stem isfrom the cord up/medulla oblongata, pons, midbrain