Brainstem Flashcards

(37 cards)

1
Q

What are the three major regions of the brainstem, from superior to inferior?

A

Midbrain, Pons, and Medulla oblongata

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2
Q

The brainstem connects which three major structures?

A

Spinal cord, Diencephalon, and Cerebellum

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3
Q

What is the brainstem’s primary role regarding neural pathways?

A

Principle pathway for long descending/ascending fiber systems

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4
Q

What is the brainstem the origin for?

A

Most cranial nerves (CNs 3-12) and some major tract systems

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5
Q

What are the ventral/anterior structures of the Midbrain, Pons, and Medulla?

A

Midbrain: Crus cerebri/cerebral peduncle
Pons: Basal area
Medulla: Pyramids

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6
Q

What is the common central region running through all three brainstem sections?

A

Tegmentum

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7
Q

What is the dorsal/posterior structure of the Midbrain?

A

Tectum

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8
Q

What is the dorsal/posterior structure of the Pons and Medulla?

A

The Fourth ventricle

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9
Q

What fluid-filled space is located in the Diencephalon?

A

3rd ventricle

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10
Q

What fluid-filled space passes through the Midbrain?

A

Cerebral aqueduct

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11
Q

What fluid-filled space is located dorsally to the Pons and Upper Medulla?

A

4th ventricle

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12
Q

What structure continues through the Lower Medulla and Spinal Cord?

A

Central canal

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13
Q

Where are the Corticospinal tracts located within the brainstem regions (Midbrain, Pons, Medulla)?

A

Ventrally in the: Crus cerebri/cerebral peduncle (Midbrain); Basilar pons (Pons); Medullary pyramids (Medulla)

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14
Q

Where does the majority of the Corticospinal tract cross over (decussate)?

A

Just inferior to the medullary pyramids (Decussation of Pyramids)

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15
Q

Where does the Corticobulbar tract synapse and where does it stop?

A

Synapses bilaterally on CN nuclei (5, 7, 9-12) throughout the brainstem; stops at the medulla

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16
Q

What is the function of the Pontine nuclei (in the Pons)?

A

Gives rise to transverse pontine (pontocerebellar) fibers which connect the cerebrum with the cerebellum for motor planning, learning, and coordination of fine movement

17
Q

The Inferior olivary nucleus forms which external structure on the ventral medulla surface?

A

The bilateral Olives (lateral to the pyramids)

18
Q

What is the function of the Inferior olivary nucleus?

A

Relays info from the red nucleus and spinal cord to the cerebellum to transmit afferent signals for smooth coordinated movements

19
Q

What does the DC-ML system transmit, and where do its 2nd order axons ascend in the brainstem?

A

Transmits fine touch, proprioception, and vibration (1st order neurons synapse on dorsal nuclei in the Medulla) . The 2nd order axons decussate and ascend as the Medial Lemniscus in the tegmentum of the Medulla, Pons, and Midbrain.

20
Q

What does the ALS (Anterolateral Spinothalamic System) transmit, and where do its axons ascend in the brainstem?

A

Transmits pain, temperature (cold/warmth), crude touch, tickle, and itch. Its 2nd order axons (Spinothalamic tracts) ascend anterolaterally in the Medulla and within the tegmentum of the Pons and Midbrain (where the tract is also called the Spinal Lemniscus).

21
Q

What two key structures are in the upper midbrain tegmentum and what is their general function?

A

Red Nucleus (motor coordination/rubrospinal tract) ; and Substantia Nigra (dopamine release, motor planning; pathology linked to Parkinson’s disease)

22
Q

The Red Nucleus receives projections from which structures?

A

Superior cerebellar peduncle and Inferior olivary nucleus

23
Q

What is the function of the Reticular Formation?

A

Mediates a variety of functions, including sleep/wakefulness, and sensory, motor, and autonomic functions

24
Q

What tract connects the cerebellum to the brainstem, decussates in the lower midbrain, and carries motor coordination info?

A

Superior cerebellar peduncle

25
What is the collective term for the four swellings on the dorsal surface of the midbrain?
Corpora Quadrigemina or Tectum/Tectal plate
26
What is the function of the Superior Colliculus?
Eye tracking movements and head & neck reflexes (projects to the tectospinal tract)
27
What is the function of the Inferior Colliculus?
Auditory processing (acuity/discrimination) and localization of sound in space
28
What structure separates the tectum and tegmentum in the midbrain and is involved in pain modulation?
Periaqueductal Gray matter (PAG)
29
Which CN nuclei are located in the midbrain tegmentum?
CN III (Oculomotor nucleus and Edinger-Westphal nucleus) and CN IV (Trochlear nucleus)
30
Which CN nuclei are located in the pons tegmentum?
CN VI (Abducens nucleus); CN VII (Facial motor nucleus, Superior salivatory nucleus) ; and CN VIII (Cochlear nuclei, Vestibular nuclei)
31
The external feature called the Facial Colliculus is formed by which CN fibers looping over which nucleus?
Fibers from the Facial motor nucleus (CN VII) looping over the Abducens nucleus (CN VI)
32
Which CN nuclei are located in the medulla tegmentum?
CN IX (Inferior salivatory nucleus , Solitary nucleus , Nucleus ambiguus ); CN X (Solitary nucleus, Nucleus ambiguus, Dorsal motor nucleus ); CN XII (Hypoglossal nucleus)
33
What is the function of the Solitary Nucleus?
Receives visceral afferents (CN IX & X) and relays taste (CN VII, IX, X) to the thalamus
34
Which artery supplies the inferior cerebellum, medulla oblongata, and choroid plexus of the 4th ventricle?
Posterior Inferior Cerebellar Artery (PICA)
35
Which artery supplies the anteroinferior cerebellum and inferolateral pons?
Anterior Inferior Cerebellar Artery (AICA)
36
Which artery supplies the pons?
Pontine Arteries (aa)
37
Which arteries primarily supply the midbrain?
Superior Cerebellar Artery (SCA) (superior & dorsal cerebellum & midbrain) and Posterior Cerebral Artery (PCA) (midbrain, cerebral peduncles)