Brain spinal cord notes

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Learning Outcomes To describe the major components of the Central, Peripheral and Autonomic Nervous systems. To understand the functions of these components. To explain how a nervous impulse is transmitted. To explain the underlying physiology behind the lesions/damage that occurs in the nervous system.

Transcript of Brain spinal cord notes

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Learning Outcomes

• To describe the major components of the Central, Peripheral and Autonomic Nervous systems.

• To understand the functions of these components.

• To explain how a nervous impulse is transmitted.

• To explain the underlying physiology behind the lesions/damage that occurs in the nervous system.

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Spinal cord structure

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Spinal cord has two main functions:

1). SC connects a large part of the peripheral nervous system to the brain.

2) SC acts as a minor coordinating centre responsible for some simple reflexes (e.g withdrawal reflex).

31 pairs of spinal nerves arise along the spinal cord

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• Extension of brain stem

• Long slender cylinder of nerve tissue (~45 cm long, 2cm diameter).

• Enclosed by a protective vertebral column (vertebrae).

• Paired spinal nerves emerge from spinal cord.

• Spinal nerves named according to region of vertebral column from which they emerge.

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Peripheral Nervous System

• 31 pairs of Spinal nerves

• 12 pairs of Cranial nerves

• Autonomic Nervous System

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8 pairs: Cranial Nerves

12 pairs: Thoracic Nerves

5 pairs: Lumbar Nerves

5 pairs: Sacral Nerves

1 Pair: Coccygeal Nerves

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• During development, vertebral column grows ~25cm longer than SC.

• Nerves pass down SC and exit at particular points from the vertebral column.

• At the lower end of vertebral column is a thick bundle of elongated nerve roots called Cauda Equina (‘horses tail’).

At this region Spinal Taps

can be taken (collection of CSF).

No SC, so no damage caused.

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• A cross section of the SC shows it is composed of grey matter in the centre surrounded by white matter.

Ventral horn

White matter

Grey matter

Dorsal horn

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Grey Matter.

– resembles the letter H (butterfly)

– consists of mixture of multipolar neurone cell bodies (colour)

– consists of 2 prominent projections:

• Posterior Dorsal Horn

• Anterior Ventral Horn

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Dorsal Horn:

• Groups of afferent fibres carrying impulses from peripheral sensory receptors enter through the dorsal root into here.

Ventral Horn:

• Nerve fibres exit from here through ventral roots to skeletal muscles.

Dorsal and ventral roots are very short and

fuse to form the spinal nerves.

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Poliomyelitis:

polio = grey matter

myelitis = inflammation of SC

• Polio virus enters through faeces contaminated water.

• Polio virus causes destruction of anterior ventral horn motor neurones.

• Muscles atrophy due to wasting (astronauts)

• Death by paralysis of respiratory or cardiac muscle

• Salk and Sabin polio vaccines eliminated disease.

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White Matter

- Composed of myelinated and unmyelinated nerve fibres.

- Divided into:

Posterior funiculi

Lateral funiculi

Anterior funiculi

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Spinal Cord Segments

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• Spinal tracts are bundles of axons grouped together into columns that extend length of the spinal cord

• A spinal tract consist of neuronal axons that have a similar destination and function

• Part of a multineurone pathway that connect the brain to the rest of the body

• Each tract either:- begins with a particular part of the brain (Motor / descending tract)

- ends with a particular part of the brain(Sensory /ascending tract)

• Tracts are named according to their origin and point of termination.

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The Brain

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• The brain is organised into several different regions dependent upon function, anatomy and development.

1). Brain stem:

- Midbrain

- Pons

- Medulla

2). Cerebellum:

3). Forebrain:

• Although specific activity is attributed to particular regions, complex interplay between regions exists.

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• A majority of the brain which we recognise is the Cerebrum (outer wrinkly part).

• Deep folds divide each half of the Cerebrum into 4 major lobes.

- Occipital lobes: process visual input- Temporal lobes: process sound- Parietal lobes: receive and process somesthetic

sensations (touch, pressure, heat, cold, pain) and proprioception

(awareness of body position)- Frontal lobes: 3 functions:

voluntary motor activity, speaking ability, thought

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Cerebral Hemispheres (Cerebrum).

• Largest part of the brain

• Account for about 80% of brain weight.

• Divided into 2 halves:

- Right cerebral hemisphere

- Left cerebral hemispheres.

• They are connected together by the Corpus Callosum.

• This is a thick band of neuronal axons transversing between the 2 hemispheres.

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• The entire surface of the cerebral hemispheres are marked by elevated ridges of tissue called Gyri.

• These are separated by shallow grooves called sulci.

• The deepest of these grooves are called fissures.

• The median longitudinal fissure separates the cerebral hemispheres from one another.

• The transverse fissure separates the cerebral hemispheres from the cerebellum below it.

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Parts of the Brain

• Cerebrum• Thalamus• Hypothalamus• Cerebellum• Midbrain• Pons• Medulla Oblongata

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Cerebral lobes and their function

• Frontal: - voluntary motor activity

- speech

- thought

• Temporal: - process sound

• Occipital: - process visual input

• Parietal: - process somesthetic sensations (touch, pressure, heat, cold

- proprioception; awareness of body position

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www.smc.edu

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The Brain

– Cerebral cortex: cognition, senses, movement

– Cerebellum: coordination of muscle contraction

– Thalamus: relay center

– Hypothalamus: homeostasis

– Limbic System: instincts, emotions

– Brain Stem: medulla controls breathing, blood pressure, heart rate

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Parts of the Brain

Cerebrum

Thalamus

Hypothalamus

Cerebellum

MidbrainPons

Medulla Oblongata Tortora, G. J. and Grabowski, S.

(2000) Principles of Anatomy and Physiology

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The Cerebrum

www.smc.edu

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www.smc.edu

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Spinal cord has two main functions:

1). SC connects a large part of the peripheral nervous system to the brain.

2) SC acts as a minor coordinating centre responsible for some simple reflexes (e.g withdrawal reflex).

• 31 pairs of spinal nerves arise along the spinal cord

The Spinal Cord

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Peripheral Nervous System

• 31 pairs of Spinal nerves– Join together to form Plexuses

• 12 pairs of Cranial nerves

• Autonomic Nervous System

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Any localised damage to spinal cord or spinal roots will attribute to some form of functional loss.

- Paralysis: (loss of motor function)

- Parasthesias: (loss of senses)

 

The effects of disease or injury upon the CNS and periphery depend on the:

- severity of the damage

- type of neurones involved

- position of neurones involved

Lesions/Damage to the Nervous System

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• Normal muscle function requires intact connections along motor pathway.

• Chain of nerve cells that runs from the brain through the spinal cord out to the muscle is called the motor pathway.

• Damage at any point reduces brain's ability to control muscle's movements.

• Reduced efficiency causes weakness (paresis).

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• Complete loss of communication prevents any willed movement.

• Lack of control is called paralysis.

• Paralysis may affect an individual muscle, but usually affects an entire body region.

• Distribution of weakness an important clue to location of the nerve damage that is causing the paralysis.

• Words describing the distribution of paralysis use the suffix "-plegia," from the Greek word for "stroke.“

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The types of paralysis are classified by region:

Monoplegia: affecting only one limb

Diplegia: affecting the same body region on both sides of the body (both arms, for example, or both sides of the face)

Hemiplegia: affecting one side of the body

Paraplegia: affecting both legs and the trunk

Quadriplegia: affecting all four limbs and the trunk.

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• The nerve damage that causes paralysis may be in the:- brain or spinal cord (CNS)- nerves outside the spinal cord (PNS).

• The most common causes of damage to the brain are:- Stroke - Tumour - Trauma (caused by a fall or a blow) - Multiple sclerosis (destruction of Myelin

sheath)) - Cerebral palsy (defect or injury to the brain that occurs at or shortly after birth) - Metabolic disorder (interferes with body's ability to maintain itself).

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• Damage to spinal cord is most often caused by trauma, (fall/car crash). Other conditions that may damage nerves within or immediately adjacent to spine include:

- Tumour

- Herniated disk (also called a ruptured or slipped disk)

- Spondylosis (a disease that causes stiffness in the joints of the spine)

- Rheumatoid arthritis of the spine

- Neurodegenerative disease (a disease that damages nerve cells)

- Multiple sclerosis.

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• Paralysis originating in the brain may sometimes be flaccid, that is, the affected muscles may be loose, weak, flabby, and without normal reflexes.

• More frequently it is spastic, that is, the affected muscles are rigid and the reflexes accentuated.

• Paralysis originating in a motor nerve (UMN) of the spinal cord is always spastic

• Paralysis originating in peripheral nerves (LMN) is always flaccid.

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Cerebrovascular Accident (Stroke)

• CVAs are: bleeds into the brainobstruction of blood supply to brain

• CVAs often affect Motor cortex and its major pathways.

• These tracts cross in medulla therefore:- left hemiplegia (stroke on right side of brain)- right hemiplegia (stroke on left side of brain)

• Small bleeds close to brain surface may result in weakness on one side (hemiparesis)

- good chance of recovery

• Larger/deeper bleeds may cause profound paralysis- may result in permanent damage

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Pupillary Reflex

• Clinical test for brain stem function• Shine bright light into patient’s eye• Normal response: pupils constrict in response to light

stimulus• Reflex via autonomic nervous system• Sensory input of bright light- to brain via optic nerve (II)

– parasympathetic impulses out via oculomotor nerve (III) – circular muscles of eye constrict

• Pupil observation important when considering head injury care

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Plantar (sole) reflex

• Tests integrity of spinal cord from L4-S2• Determines functionality of corticospinal tracts• Normal response is a downward flexion (curling) of

toes• If corticospinal tract damaged, normal plantar’s reflex

replaced by Babinski’s sign• Toes fan backwards

Normal Abnormal