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
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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).
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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
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front 19 What are the functional areas of the Cerebral Cortex? | back 19 Sensory, motor, and association
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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.
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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)
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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
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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
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front 30 Where is the Thalamus and what does it do? | back 30 - biggest part of the diencephalon
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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)
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front 32 Where is the pineal gland located and what does it do? | back 32 *A part of the endocrine system.
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front 33 Where is the Hypothalamus and what are its parts? | back 33 - front and bottom of the the thalamus
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front 34 Where is the Optic chiasma located and what does it do? | back 34 - located in the hypothalamus
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front 35 Where are the mamillary bodies located and what do they do? | back 35 - located in the hypothalamus
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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.
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front 37 What are the functions of the Hypothalamus? | back 37 SA TALE
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front 38 What are the parts and function of the Brain stem? | back 38 Encloses the fourth ventricle
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front 39 Function and action of the Midbrain? | back 39 - It has a cerebral aqueduct connecting the third (diencephalon) and fourth (brainstem) ventricles
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front 40 Function and action of the Pons? | back 40 - Helps the medulla oblongota maintain normal breathing rhythms
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front 41 Function and action of the Medulla Oblongata? | back 41 Relay point between the cerebrum and the spinal cord.
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front 42 What are the functions of the Cerebellum? | back 42 - coordinates skeletal muscle movement by providing precise timing and appropriate patterns
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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.
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front 50 Arachnoid Mater | back 50 The fine elastic middle layer of the meninges.
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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.
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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.
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front 54 What are the functions of Cerebrospinal Fluid (CSF)? | back 54 It forms a cushion - provides protection from blows and other trauma.
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front 55 Where is the CSF made and how? | back 55 Choroid plexuses in all 4 ventricles.
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front 56 Arachnoid villi | back 56 little pockets in arachnoid mater poke through lower level of dura mater.
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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...
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front 60 What is the Blood-Brain Barrier?
| 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
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front 63 How is the BBB selective? | back 63 It's very picky in a smart way:
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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
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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.
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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
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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
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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. |