What is the brainstem made up of? What are their alternative names and how can this be remembered?
STY - Midbrain = meSencephalon - Pons = meTencaphalon - Medulla Oblongata = mYelencephalon (together pons and medulla = rhomboencephalon)
Where do the cranial nerves exit the brain?
What is ARAS? What activities does it affect?
> ascending reticular activating system part of the reticular formation
- collection of neuronal cell bodies - meshwork
- activates cerebral cortex -> awake state and levle of conciousness
affects many activities
- respiration
- CV function
- voluntary excretion
- swallowing
- vomiting
- muscle tone
- voluntary movement
What nuclei are present in the pons?
> pontine nucleus
- integrates visual inputs -> motor
What general functions (motor, sensory etc) do the cranial nerves have?
Which nucleus is responsible for gait generation and where is this found?
> red nucleus
What type of lesion causes decerebrate rigidity?
What does decerebrate rigidity look like?
- all 4 limbs stiff
How does decerebellate rigidity occour?
Where is the oculomotor nucleus and what is this responsible for?
> midbrain
repsonsible for…
- motor and parasympathetic
- sphincter pupillary muscle constriction
- extraocular muscles (3 recti, not lateral, and the ventral oblique)
- levator palpebrae superioris muscle
Outline the path of the PLR
How do the short ciliary nerves differ between species? Clinical implications?
(=iridal sphincter muscle)
- dogs: short ciliary fibres (5-8)
- cats: nasal and malar (lateral)
> in cats if one nerve is affected -> D shaped pupil (dyscoria)
What pathologies may affect the short ciliary nerves in cats?
Localise the lesion: 5yo FS whippet, 2-3 week hx lethargy and acute onset blindness 4d ago, absent menace OU, fixed dilated pupils OU, normal fundus, depressed mental status
Bilateral optic nerves, optic chiasm
If PLR deficiits and vision loss both present where must the lesion be? potential causes
Where the pathways are shared ie. optic nerves and chiasm
How does the eye appear if occulomotor is damaged?
Lateral stabismus and rotation medially d/t unopposed actions of lateral rectus and dorsal oblique
What does trochlear do?
How would the eye appear with a trochlear lesion?
What is the tectotegmentalspinal tract? Where does it originate? What clinical signs are seen with dysfunction of this pathway?
What are the 1st, 2nd and 3rd order neurons in the tectotegmentalspinal tract?
1 - tectotegmental spinal tract from midbrain through spinal cord
2 - nerves from spine - cranial cervical ganglion [ not in brain]
3 - nerve innervating the eye via tympano occipital fissure and orbital fissure, past trigeminal ganglion
Where do sympathetic and parasympathetic fibres exit the spine?
- thoracolumbar: symp
What are the 3 forms of Horner’s syndrome? Clinical signs associated with each?
> 1st order - intracranial signs - spinal cord dysfunction > 2nd order - brachial plexus - cervical trauma > 3rd order - middle/inner ear dz - facial paralysis - vestibular dysfunction
What nucleus is in the pons? Functions?
Trigeminal
Where are the regions innervatedby each branch of trigem?