Brain 1: Spinal cord physiology and brain development and coverings Flashcards

0
Q

2 main sensory tracts

A

Spinothalamic tract:

Posterior column:

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1
Q

2 main function of spinal cord

A
  1. Propagates nerve impulses (in white matter)

2. Integrates information (in grey matter)

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2
Q

What does spinothalamic tract do

A

Conveys nerve impulses for sensing pain, temperature, itch, tickle and deep pressure

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3
Q

What is two tracts of posterior column?

A

Facilicus (leg) and Cunneate fascilicus (arm)

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4
Q

What does posterior column do?

A

conveys nerve impulses for touch, light pressure, vibration and conscious proprioception

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5
Q

What is conscious proprioception

A

The awareness of the positions and movements of muscles, tendons and joints

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6
Q

what is 2 main motor tracts

A

Direct pathways (lateral corticospinal tract, anterior corticospinal tract, corticobulbar tract)
corti- cortex,
spinal -spinal, efferent, motor
bulbar - brainstem

Indirect pathways (rubrospinal, tectospinal, vestibulospinal, lateral reticulospinal, medial reticulospinal tracts)

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7
Q

What is direct pathways of motor tracts

A

nerve impulses originate in cerebral cortex
cause voluntary movements of skeletal mm
brainstem is considered traveling down

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8
Q

what do indirect pathways of motor tracts do

A

nerve impulses originate in brain stem
cause automatic movements
helps coordinate body movements with visual stimuli
maintain muscle tone

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9
Q

what is reflex

A

a fast involuntary unplanned sequence of actions that occurs in response to a particular stimulus
can be in born or learned

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10
Q

4 different reflexes

A

spinal reflex
cranial reflex
somatic reflex
automatic (visceral) reflexes

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11
Q

spinal reflex is

A

when integration happens in gray matter in Spinal cord

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12
Q

cranial reflex is

A

when integration happens in brainstem

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13
Q

somatic reflex is

A

involves contraction of skeletal muscle

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14
Q

autonomic (visceral) reflexes is

A

not usually consciously perceived

Invovled responses of smooth mm, cardiac mm and glands

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15
Q

Four somatic spinal reflexes

A
  1. The stretch reflex
  2. Tendon reflex
  3. Flexor (withdrawal reflex)
  4. crossed extensor reflex
16
Q

Stretch reflex

A
Sensor receptor: muscle spindle
Mono synapse
Reciprocal innervation: yes
ipsilateral reflex
intersegmental: no
17
Q

Tendon reflex

A
Sensory receptor: G.T.O
Poly synapses
Reciprocal innervation: yes
Ipsilateral reflex
Intersegmental: No
18
Q

Flexor (withdrawal) reflex

A
Sensory receptor: n/a
Poly synapses
Reciprocal innervation: Yes
Ipsilateral reflex
intersegmental: Yes
19
Q

Cross extensor reflex

A

Sensory receptor: n/a
poly synapses
reciprocal innervation: yes
Intersegmental: yes

20
Q

what do brain and spinal cord develop from

A

ectoderm, arranged in a neural tube

21
Q

Three primary brain vesicles

A

Prosencephalon (forebrain)
Mesencephalon (midbrain)
Rhombencephalon (hindbrain)
3-4 week embryo

22
Q

5 secondary brain vesicles

A

5 week embryo
Prosencephalon divides to Telencephalon and Dienephalon
Mesencephalon stays as Mesencephalon
Rhombencephalon divides to Metencephalon and Myelencephalon

23
Q

Adult brain structure (walls and Cavities)

A

5 week embryo
Telencephalon becomes wall: Cerebrum, Cavities: lateral ventricles
Diencephalon becomes wall: Thalamus, hypothalamus and epithalamus, Cavities: Third ventricle
Mesencephalon becomes wall: Midbrain, cavities: Aqueduct of the midbrain
Metencephalon becomes wall: pons and cerebellum, cavities: upper part of forth ventricle
Myelencephalon becomes wall: Medulla oblongata, cavities: lower part of forth ventricle

24
Q

what does brain stem have

A

Continuous with spinal cord
medulla oblongata
pons
midbrain

25
Q

Where is cerebellum located?

A

posterior to brain stem

26
Q

what and where is diencephalon

A

superior to brain stem
Thalamus
Hypothalamus
epithalamus

27
Q

Where and what is cerebrum

A

largest part of the brain

sits on diencephalon

28
Q

protective coverings of the brain

A

cranium and cranial meninges surround and protect the brain

cranial meninges - continuous with the spinal meninges (Dura mater, arachnoid mater and pia mater)

29
Q

What is missing from spinal cord structure

A

no epidural space around brain

30
Q

Dura mater of the brain

A

outer meningeal layer made up of periosteal layer (external) and meningeal layer (internal). These 2 layers are fused together except where they separate to enclose the dural venous sinuses

31
Q

what is Dural venous sinuse

A

Endothelial-lined venous channels

Drain blood from the brain and deliver it into internal jugular veins

32
Q

3 extensions of dura mater

A
  1. Falx cerebri: separates the 2 hemispheres of the cerebrum
  2. Falx cerebelli: separates the 2 hemisphere of cerebellum
    3: Tentonium cerebelli: Separates the cerebrum from the cerebellum
33
Q

Blood flows to brain mainly via

A

internal carotid, vertebral arteries

34
Q

Blood flows out of brain via

A

the dural venous sinuses which drain into the internal jugular veins