Lecture 13 - Central Nervous System
Lecture 13 - Central Nervous System
Lecture 13 - Central Nervous System
Spinal cord
Fetal 3rd month: ends at coccyx Birth: ends at L3 Adult position at approx L1-2 during childhood End: conus medullaris
This tapers into filum terminale of connective tissue, tethered to coccyx
Spinal cord segments are superior to where their corresponding spinal nerves emerge through intervetebral foramina (see also fig 17.5, p 288) Denticulate ligaments: lateral shelves of pia mater anchoring to dura (meninges: more later)
http://www.apparelyzed.com/spinalcord.html
Spinal nerves
Part of the peripheral nervous system 31 pairs attach through dorsal and ventral nerve roots Lie in intervertebral foramina
Clinically, for example when referring to disc impingement, both levels of vertebra mentioned, e.g. C6-7 disc impinging on root 7 Symptoms usually indicate which level
More about spinal nerves in the peripheral nervous system lecture
Protection:
3 meninges: dura mater (outer) arachnoid mater (middle) pia mater (inner) 3 potential spaces epidural: outside dura subdural: between dura & arachnoid subarachnoid: deep to arachnoid
http://www.eorthopod.com/images/ContentImages/pm/pm_general_esi/pmp_g eneral_esi_epidural_space.jpg
LP (lumbar puncure) = spinal tap (needle introduced into subdural space to collect CSF)
Lumbar spine needs to be flexed so can go between spinous processes
Originally thought to be a narrow fluid-filled interval between the dural and arachnoid; now known to be an artificial space created by the separation of the arachnoid from the dura as the result of trauma or some ongoing pathologic process; in the healthy state, the arachnoid is attached to the dura and a naturally occurring subdural space is not present. http://cancerweb.ncl.ac.uk/cgibin/omd?subdural+space
Epidural space is external to dura Anesthestics are often injected into epidural space Injection into correct space is vital; mistakes can be lethal
Ventral (anterior)
Commissural fibers: white-matter fibers crossing from one side of cord to the other Most pathways cross (or decussate) at some point Most synapse two or three times along the way, e.g. in brain stem, thalamus or other
These further divide, each with a fluid filled region: ventricle, aqueduct or canal
Spinal cord also has a canal
Brain development
Learn forebrain, midbrain and hindbrain in (b) See next color coded pics in reference to (d) Learn (e) Encephalos means brain (otherwise you dont need to learn c)
Space restrictions force cerebral hemispheres to grow posteriorly over rest of brain, enveloping it Cerebral hemispheres grow into horseshoe shape (b and c) Continued growth causes creases, folds and wrinkles
Anatomical classification
Cerebral hemispheres Diencephalon
Thalamus Hypothalamus
Brain stem
Midbrain Pons Medulla
Parts of Brain
Ventricles
Central cavities expanded Filled with CSF (cerebrospinal fluid) Lined by ependymal cells (these cells lining the choroid plexus make the CSF: see later slides) Continuous with each other and central canal of spinal cord
In the following slides, the ventricles are the parts colored blue
Lateral ventricles
Paired, horseshoe shape In cerebral hemispheres Anterior are close, separated only by thin Septum pellucidum
Third ventricle
In diencephalon Connections
Interventricular foramen Cerebral aqueduct
Fourth ventricle
In the brainstem Dorsal to pons and top of medulla Holes connect it with subarachnoid space
Subarachnoid space
Aqua blue in this pic ________ Under thick coverings of brain Filled with CSF also Red: choroid plexus (more later)
Surface anatomy
Gyri (plural of gyrus)
Elevated ridges Entire surface
Parts of Brain
simplified
Cerebral hemispheres
Lobes: under bones of same name
Frontal Parietal Temporal Occipital Plus: Insula (buried deep in lateral sulcus)
Lateral sulcus separates temporal lobe from parietal lobe arieto-occipital sulcus divides occipital and parietal lobes (not seen from outside) Transverse cerebral fissure separates cerebral hemispheres from cerebellum
coronal section
Note: longitudinal fissure, lateral sulcus, insula Note: cerebral cortex (external sheet of gray), cerebral white, deep gray (basal ganglia)
Cerebral cortex
Executive functioning capability Gray matter: of neuron cell bodies, dendrites, short unmyelinated axons
100 billion neurons with average of 10,000 contacts each
No fiber tracts (would be white) 2-4 mm thick (about 1/8 inch) Brodmann areas (historical: 52 structurally different areas given #s) Neuroimaging: functional organization
(example later)
Prenatal life: genes are responsible for creating the architecture of the brain
Cortex is the last to develop and very immature at birth
Preadolescence: another increase in synaptic formation Adolescence until 25: brain becomes a reconstruction site
Connections important for self-regulation (in prefrontal cortex) are being remodeled: important for a sense of wholeness Causes personal turbulence Susceptible to stress and toxins (like alcohol and drugs) during these years; affects the rest of ones life
Cerebral cortex
All the neurons are interneurons
By definition confined to the CNS They have to synapse somewhere before the info passes to the peripheral nerves
Sensory areas
Posterior to central sulcus
Primary somatosensory cortex: postcentral gyrus of parietal lobe
(allows conscious awareness of sensation and the ability to localize it: where the sensation is from)
fMRI: functional magnetic resonance imaging Cerebral cortex of person speaking & hearing Activity (blood flow) in posterior frontal and superior temporal lobes respectively
Motor areas
Anterior to central sulcus Primary motor area
Precentral gyrus of frontal lobe (4) Conscious or voluntary movement of skeletal muscles
Association Areas
Remember Three kinds of functional areas (cerebrum)
1. Motor areas: movement 2. Sensory areas: perception
Association Areas
Tie together different kinds of sensory input Associate new input with memories Is to be renamed higher-order processing areas
Intellect Abstract ideas Judgment Personality Impulse control Persistence Complex Reasoning Long-term planning
Executive functioning e.g. multiple step problem solving requiring temporary storage of info (working memory)
Wernickes area
Region involved in recognizing and understanding spoken words
Junction of parietal and temporal lobes One hemisphere only, usually left (Outlined by dashes) Pathology: comprehension impaired for written and spoken language: output fluent and voluminous but incoherent (words understandable but dont make sense; as opposed to the opposite with Brocas area)
Association fibers: connect different parts of the same hemisphere; can be long or short
Projection fibers
Corona radiata: _________________ fanning out of the fibers Internal capsule: ___________________ bundled, pass down
Commisure
Corpus callosum: ________________ connects right and left hemispheres
Basal ganglia
Subcortical motor nuclei Part of extrapyramidal system Cooperate with cerebral cortex in controlling movements Most important ones: caudate nucleus, lentiform nucleus composed of putamen and globus pallidus Not part of basal forebrain nuclei (which are related to arousal, learning , memory and motor control)
Transverse section
Internal capsule passes between diencephalon and basal ganglia to give them a striped appearance
Caudate and lentiform sometimes called corpus striatum because of this
Basal ganglia
Cooperate with cerebral cortex in controlling movements Communicate with cerebral cortex, receive input from cortical areas, send most of output back to motor cortex through thalamus Involved with stopping/starting & intensity of movements Dyskinesias bad movements
Parkinsons disease: loss of inhibition from substantia nigra of midbrain everything slows down Huntington disease: overstimulation (choreoathetosis) degeneration of corpus striatum which inhibits; eventual degeneration of cerebral cortex (AD; genetic test available) Extrapyramidal drug side effects: tardive dyskinesia
Can be irreversible; haloperidol, thorazine and similar drugs
Basal ganglia
Note relationship of basal ganglia to thalamus and ventricles
Coronal section
Hypothalamus
Forms inferolateral walls of 3rd ventricle Many named nuclei
Coronal section
Olfactory bulbs Olfactory tracts Optic nerves Optic chiasma (partial cross over) Optic tracts Mammillary bodies
(looking at brain from below)
Hypothalamus
Below thalamus Main visceral control center
Autonomic nervous system (peripheral motor neurons controlling smooth and cardiac muscle and gland secretions): heart rate, blood pressure, gastrointestinal tract, sweat and salivary glands, etc. Emotional responses (pleasure, rage, sex drive, fear) Body temp, hunger, thirst sensations Some behaviors Regulation of sleep-wake centers: circadian rhythm (receives info on light/dark cycles from optic nerve) Control of endocrine system through pituitary gland Involved, with other sites, in formation of memory
Epithalamus
Third and most dorsal part of diencephalon Part of roof of 3rd ventricle Pineal gland or body (unpaired): produces melatonin signaling nighttime sleep Also a tiny group of nuclei Coronal section
Brain Stem
Rigidly programmed automatic behavior necessary for survival Passageway for fiber tracts running between cerebrum and spinal cord Heavily involved with innvervation of face and head (10 of the12 cranial nerves attach to it)
Brain stem
Midbrain Pons Medulla oblongata
Midbrain
Corpora quadrigemina:
__Cerebral peduncles____
Contain pyramidal motor tracts
_______Periaqueductal gray
(flight/flight; nausea with visceral pain; some cranial nerve nuclei)
Pons
3 cerebellar peduncles__ (one to each of the three parts of the brain stem)
Dorsal view
Medulla oblongata
Relays sensory info to cerebral cortex and cerebellum Contains many CN and other nuclei Autonomic centers controlling heart rate, respiratory rhythm, blood pressure; involuntary centers of vomiting, swallowing, etc.
Pyramidal=corticospinal tracts; these are motor tracts which cross over in the decussation. They are named pyramids because they supposedly look like them, and also they originate from pyramidal neurons in the motor cortex. The tracts have the name of origin 1st, therefore corticospinal tells you they go from the cortex (cortico-) to the spinal cord (-spinal) see later slides
Dorsal view
Brain Stem in mid-sagittal plane Note cerebral aqueduct and fourth ventricle*
* *
Two major hemispheres: three lobes each Anterior Posterior Floculonodular Separated from brain stem by 4th ventricle Vermis: midline lobe connecting hemispheres
Cerebellum
Outer cortex of gray Inner branching white matter, called arbor vitae
Functions of cerebellum
Smooths, coordinates & fine tunes bodily movements Helps maintain body posture Helps maintain equilibrium How?
Gets info from cerebrum re: movements being planned Gets info from inner ear re: equilibrium Gets info from proprioceptors (sensory receptors informing where the parts of the body actually are) Using feedback, adjustments are made
Also some role in cognition Damage: ataxia, incoordination, wide-based gait, overshooting, proprioception problems
Limbic system
(not a discrete structure - includes many brain areas)
Most important parts: Hipocampus Amygdala Cingulate gyrus Orbitofrontal cortex (not labeled; is behind eyes - part of the prefrontal cortex but connects closely)
Necessary for emotional balance, adaptation to environmental demands (including fearful situations, etc.), for creating meaningful connections with others (e.g. ability to interpret facial expressions and respond appropriately), and more
Reticular formation
Runs through central core of medulla, pons and midbrain
Reticular activating system (RAS): keeps the cerebral cortex alert and conscious Some motor control
Brain protection
1.Meninges 2. Cerebrospinal fluid 3. Blood brain barrier
Meninges
1. Dura mater: 2 layers of fibrous connective tissue, fused except for dural sinuses
Periosteal layer attached to bone Meningeal layer - proper brain covering
Falx cerebelli
Runs vertically along vermis of cerebellum
Tentorium cerebelli
Sheet in transverse fissure between cerebrum & cerebellum
Arachnoid mater
Between dura and arachnoid: subdural space Dura and arachnoid cover brain loosely Deep to arachnoid is subarachnoid space
Filled with CSF Lots of vessels run through (susceptible to tearing)
Pia mater
Delicate, clings to brain following convolutions
500 ml/d; total volume 100-160 ml (1/2 c) Cushions and nourishes brain Assayed in diagnosing meningitis, bleeds, MS Hydrocephalus: excessive accumulation
CSF circulation: through ventricles, median and lateral apertures, subarachnoid space, arachnoid villi, and into the blood of the superior sagittal sinus
Hydrocephalus
Blood-Brain Barrier
Tight junctions between endothelial cells of brain capillaries, instead of the usual permeability Highly selective transport mechanisms Allows nutrients, O2, CO2 Not a barrier against uncharged and lipid soluble molecules; allows alcohol, nicotine, and some drugs including anesthetics
Descending pathways: motor instructions from brain to more caudal regions of the CNS
Pyramidal (corticospinal) most important to know All others (extrapyramidal)
Commissural fibers: crossing from one side of cord to the other Most pathways cross (or decussate) at some point Most synapse two or three times along the way, e.g. in brain stem, thalamus or other
Pyramidal tracts: Lateral corticospinal cross in pyramids of medulla; voluntary motor to limb muscles Ventral (anterior) corticospinal cross at spinal cord; voluntary to axial muscles Extrapyramidal tracts: one example
Check out: Medical gross anatomy atlas images (good teaching pics): http://anatomy.med.umich.edu/atlas/atlas_index.ht ml (can access from Paul Wissmans site also: -anatomy and physiology -brain and spinal cord -brain pics at U. Mich) Really good site for photos of human brain dissections: http://library.med.utah.edu/WebPath/HISTHTML/N EURANAT/NEURANCA.html
Know the names of the ventricles and which ones connect to which, in order You dont need to know the #s of the Brodman areas You do need to know where are the: primary somatosensory, primary motor, brocas speech, visual cortex, the lobes of the brain, main sulci and fissures, precentral and postcentral gyri and which go with which of motor and sensory, etc For the most part, the medical info is FYI
From this site, which also has text explanations: http://www.emc.maricopa.edu/facul ty/farabee/BIOBK/BioBookNERV.h tml
Internal capsule
1. 2. 3. Anterior limb of internal capsule Genu of internal capsule Posterior limb of internal capsule