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Chapter 12: Central Nervous System

front 1

CNS includes

back 1

Brain and spinal cord

front 2

White matter consists of

back 2

lots of bundled, myelinated axons in fiber tracts

front 3

Job of white matter

back 3

communication

front 4

Grey matter and White matter location in Brain

back 4

outer cortex and inner area

front 5

Grey matter and White matter location in Spinal Cord

back 5

inner H area and outer area

front 6

Grey matter consists of

back 6

unmyelinated axon fibers, dendrites, cell bodies, and glial cells - all superficial stuff

front 7

Four regions of the brain

back 7

cerebrum, cerebellum, brain stem and diencephalon

front 8

Four ventricles of the brain

back 8

(2) lateral ventricle
(1) Third ventricle
(1) Fourth ventricle

front 9

location of lateral ventricle

back 9

cerebrum

front 10

location of third ventricle

back 10

diencephalon

front 11

location of fourth ventricle

back 11

brain stem

front 12

What are Gyri?

back 12

elevated ridges in the CNS

front 13

What are Sulci?

back 13

shallow grooves in the CNS that divide the cerebrum into frontal, parietal, temporal, occipital and insular lobes.

front 14

What are fissures?

back 14

deep grooves that separate the brain longitudinally (left and right hemispheres) and transverse (separates cerebrum and cerebellum)

front 15

What are the names of Cerebral Lobes and how many are there?

back 15

(5) Frontal lobe, Parietal lobe, Occipital lobe, Temporal lobe, Gyri of Insula

front 16

What is the Cerebral Cortex?

back 16

- Consists of the outer gray matter region (everything except the myelinated fibers).
- The outside or superficial portion of the cerebrum.
- Contains neuron cell bodies, dendrites, glial cells, but no fiber tracts

front 17

Where is the conscious mind found?

back 17

Cerebral Cortex

front 18

What are the functions of the Cerebral Cortex?

back 18

awareness
sensation
memory
communication
understanding
voluntary movements

front 19

What are the functional areas of the Cerebral Cortex?

back 19

Sensory, motor, and association
*All made up of interneurons (inside CNS)

front 20

How does Hemisphere specialization affect the function of each side of the brain?

back 20

- Cerebral dominance designates the hemisphere that's dominant for language, math and logic.
- Less dominant hemisphere involves in visual-spatial, artistic, musical skills, emotion and intuition
- the dominant side of the brain controls the opposite side of the body

front 21

What are the three basic regions of each cerebral hemisphere?

back 21

(1) a superficial cortex of gray matter (looks gray in fresh brain tissue)
(2) internal white matter (the myelinated axons in fiber tracts running in three different directions)
(3) Basal Nuclei (islands of gray matter situated deep within the white matter)

front 22

Where is Cerebral white matter located?

back 22

Deep to the cortex layer - internal

front 23

What does the cerebral white matter consist of?

back 23

consists of axons bundled into tracts

front 24

What does the cerebral white matter communicate between?

back 24

communicates between cerebral cortex and lower CNS center and different areas within cerebrum.

front 25

How are white matter tracts named and what are those names?

back 25

named based on the directions they run
Commissures
Association
Projection

front 26

Commissures: definition

back 26

tracts that communicate between two hemispheres - corpus callosum is largest

front 27

Association fibers: definition

back 27

tracts that connect different parts of the same hemisphere - draped like curtains

front 28

Projection fibers: definition

back 28

tracts that connect cerebrum to lower brain or spinal cord - project outward from the diencephalon in rays

front 29

Where is the diencephalon located and what does it consist of?

back 29

- its a very small area, embedded in the middle of the brain, surrounded by the cerebellum
- consists of the thalamus, epithalamus and the hypothalamus*
- encloses the third ventricle
*most important of the 3

front 30

Where is the Thalamus and what does it do?

back 30

- biggest part of the diencephalon
- projects & receives fibers from the cerebral cortex - lots of relay work b/c lots of neurons, lots of sensory nerves come out here.
*senses from all parts of body converge and synapse here - gateway to the cerebral cortex

front 31

Where is the Epithalamus and what does it do?

back 31

- above and to the back to the Thalamus (superior-dorsal portion of diencephalon)
- includes the pineal gland

front 32

Where is the pineal gland located and what does it do?

back 32

*A part of the endocrine system.
- extends externally from the posterior border of the epithalamus
- secretes Melatonin (a hormone involved with sleep-wake cycles (along with hypothalamus) and mood)

front 33

Where is the Hypothalamus and what are its parts?

back 33

- front and bottom of the the thalamus
- *most important of the three parts
- consists of three parts - optic chiasma, mammillary bodies, and the infundibulum (connects the pituitary gland to the hypothalamus by a stalk of hypothalamic tissue)

front 34

Where is the Optic chiasma located and what does it do?

back 34

- located in the hypothalamus
- spot where the optic nerves cross over

front 35

Where are the mamillary bodies located and what do they do?

back 35

- located in the hypothalamus
- relay station for the olfactory senses

front 36

Where is the pituitary gland and what does it do?

back 36

located between the optic chiasma and mammillary bodies on the infundibulum (a stalk of hypothalamic tissue.
secretes 8 hormones (ex. Antidiuretic, growth hormones and oxytocin)
part of the endocrine system

front 37

What are the functions of the Hypothalamus?

back 37

SA TALE
Sleep Cycle - via light darkness cues
Autonomic control center - BP, HR, breathing rate, digestive tract motility, pupil size
Temperature - regulates set point of body temp*
Appetite - food intake and fluid balance
Libido - control of the endocrine system (pituitary glands)
Emotion - biological rhythms, drives, emotions of pleasure, fear and rage.
*the only function that is only controlled by this part of the brain.

front 38

What are the parts and function of the Brain stem?

back 38

Encloses the fourth ventricle
- midbrain
- pons
- medulla oblongota
Functions:
- controls autonomic functions
- communicates between higher and lower CNS
- associated with 10 pairs of cranial nerves

front 39

Function and action of the Midbrain?

back 39

- It has a cerebral aqueduct connecting the third (diencephalon) and fourth (brainstem) ventricles
- center for visual and auditory reflexes
- pathway that controls fight-or-flight response

front 40

Function and action of the Pons?

back 40

- Helps the medulla oblongota maintain normal breathing rhythms
- acts as a relay point between the cerebrum and the cerebellum

front 41

Function and action of the Medulla Oblongata?

back 41

Relay point between the cerebrum and the spinal cord.
- When you are asleep/unconscious it keeps your heart and lungs working
- in charge of methods of expelling something (vomiting, hiccuping, swallowing, coughing, and sneezing)

front 42

What are the functions of the Cerebellum?

back 42

- coordinates skeletal muscle movement by providing precise timing and appropriate patterns
- recognizes and predicts sequences of events and can make adjustments
- word association and puzzle solving
*lots of balancing things *makes small adjustments (balance etc) *stores information for quick access (like in typing) - almost like a reflex.

front 43

What is the vermis?

back 43

a fissure that connects the two hemispheres of the cerebellum

front 44

What is a physical difference between cerebellum and cerebrum?

back 44

one has transversely oriented gyri ONLY

front 45

Where is the Arbor Vitae located?

back 45

the white pattern in the cerebellum

front 46

What protect the brain?

back 46

Skull bones, meninges, CSF, Blood-Brain Barrier

front 47

What is the Meninges?

back 47

A system of membranes that envelopes the CNS.

front 48

What are the layers of the Meninges?

back 48

Pia mater, Arachnoid Mater, Dura Mater

front 49

Dura Mater

back 49

Thick, durable outer layer of the meninges.
Three dural septa fold inward to limit excessive movement of the brain.

front 50

Arachnoid Mater

back 50

The fine elastic middle layer of the meninges.
- extensions secure it to the layer below and create a space that is filled with CSF.

front 51

Subarachnoid space

back 51

the space between arachnoid and pia maters; filled with CSF.

front 52

Pia Mater

back 52

Deep, delicate layer that hugs the brain - flows over the gyri and into the sulci.
Contains LOTS of tiny blood vessels

front 53

What is Cerebrospinal Fluid (CSF)?

back 53

a water solution found in between the cerebral cortex and the meninges and fills the inside of the brain body.
Similar to plasma but has less protein and different ion concentrations.

front 54

What are the functions of Cerebrospinal Fluid (CSF)?

back 54

It forms a cushion - provides protection from blows and other trauma.
Gives buoyancy and reduces brain weight
Provides nourishment.

front 55

Where is the CSF made and how?

back 55

Choroid plexuses in all 4 ventricles.
It is made up of capillaries and ependymal cells.
The capillaries filter plasma fluid whole ependymal cells change ion concentrations.
It then drains out by the arachnoid villi into venous (de-oxygenated) blood.

front 56

Arachnoid villi

back 56

little pockets in arachnoid mater poke through lower level of dura mater.
Provide a route for CSF to drain into venous (deoxygenated blood)

front 57

How much CSF is located in the human body?

back 57

150mL, replaced every 8 hours -- formed and drained at the same rate.

front 58

How is CSF Circulated?

back 58

It is made in individual ventricles but circulates through the brain in a specific pattern, cilia on ependymal cells beats and helps circulate.

front 59

Path of CSF Circulation?

back 59

secreted by the villi in the ventricle...
-->so it starts from the lateral ventricle
-->reaches the third ventricle via the foramen of monroe
-->then to the fourth ventricle via the aqueduct of sylvius
-->then to the arachnoid granulations via the foramen of lushka and magendie{anyone of them}
-->them from the subarachnoid space into the spinal cord

front 60

What is the Blood-Brain Barrier?
(BBB)

back 60

Like the group of the same name - it's a protective mechanism that maintains a stable environment for the brain.

front 61

How does the BBB function?

back 61

Capillaries are very thin veins made of a single layer of squamous epithelial, but the capillaries in the brain have special modifications to keep substances away from neurons.

front 62

What special modifications do brain capillaries have?

back 62

- a continuous endothelium of capillary walls
- relatively thick connective tissue on capillaries

front 63

How is the BBB selective?

back 63

It's very picky in a smart way:
it takes all the good stuff (nutrients enter freely - oxygen, glucose, amino acids, electrolytes)and expels wastes (metabolic and CO2) into blood vessels easily.

front 64

What is the BBB ineffective against protection against?

back 64

alcohol, nicotine and anesthetics

front 65

What is the length of the spinal cord in relation to verterbrae?

back 65

It runs from C1 to L2

front 66

What are the functions of the spinal cord?

back 66

- provides two way communication with the brain
- a major reflex center

front 67

What protects the spinal cord?

back 67

vertebrae, meninges, and Cerebrospinal fluid

front 68

Is the spinal cord uniform throughout its length?

back 68

No - the Cervical and lumbar regions are enlarged

front 69

How many pairs of spinal nerves (part of PNS) are attached to the spinal cord?

back 69

31 pairs

front 70

What is internal of the spinal cord

back 70

Inner gray(really brown) matter shaped like a butterfly - the dorsal edge of the wing (faces the back) is the Dorsal horn, the opposing edge is the ventral horn.

front 71

Dorsal horn

back 71

- dorsal edge of the butterfly wing.
- contain interneurons (cell bodies)
- sensory neuron axons enter via dorsal root and synapse with the interneurons.
- includes the Dorsal root ganglion

front 72

What is the Dorsal root ganglion?

back 72

the bulging area of dorsal root - where sensory neuron cell bodies gather

front 73

Ventral horns

back 73

- ventral side of the butterfly wing
- contains motor neurons
- send their axons via ventral roots to skeletal muscles and glands

front 74

What is the white matter in the spinal cord?

back 74

*like an elecator - impulses go up to brain and down to the spinal cord.

front 75

What are the parts of the spinal cord white matter?

back 75

divided into three columns (dorsal, ventral, and lateral) and two tracts that run continuously with the brain -- Sensory (afferent)and Motor (efferent)

front 76

What are the tracts in the spinal cord and what is their purpose?

back 76

Sensory (afferent) -- ascending tracts conduct impulses toward the brain
Motor (efferent) -- descending tracts conduct downward in the spinal cord
**Impulses run continuously up to brain and down to spinal cord <-- like an elevator

front 77

Where is the CSF in the Spinal Meninges?

back 77

Fills the subarachnoid space from C1 to S2

front 78

Where are the layers of the meninges located in the spine?

back 78

normal except pia mater continues to coccyx and anchors spinal cord and CSF continues till S2

front 79

What is the best place to do a lumbar puncture or spinal tap and why?

back 79

Between L2 and S2 because the spinal cord stops at the L2 so this area is all fluid.