Lecture 5: cont Flashcards

1
Q

Where are the climbing fibers coming from and which neurotransmitters are used for communication?

A

Contralateral inferior olivary nuclei
glutamate or aspartate

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2
Q

Parallel fibers are axons of _________ cells

A

granule

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3
Q

Inhibition vs. Disinhibition:
Parallel fibers activate Purkinje cell and _________/______ cell
Negatively regulated by ________ cell: ______ aspect of signal processing

A

basket/stellate
Golgi; temporal

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4
Q

Inhibition vs. Disinhibition:
Purkinje cells in flanking zones will be ________ by basket and stellate cells: ______ aspect
Selectively inhibit/dishinbit of nuclei both _______ &______ aspect

A

inhibited; spatial
temporal and spatial

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5
Q

Regulating Firing Rate of Purkinje cells:
_________ only from inferior olivary nuclei
-complex spike, “calcium spike”
_________synaspe with granule cells —> activate target cells through _______ fibers

A

Climbing fibers
Mossy fibers; parallel fibers

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6
Q

Climbing and Multilayered fibers are only temporal effects? True or False

A

False: both temporal and spatial

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7
Q

Regulating Firing Rate of Purkinje cells:
Purkinje cells integrate the spatial and temporal patterns of excitatory and inhibitory inputs from parallel fibers, climbing fibers, and interneurons. This is known as ____________

A

Spatiotemporal summation

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8
Q

Motor Functions of Vestibulocerebellum:
_______ pathway: Purkinje cells project to vestibular nuclei directly

________descending motor pathway that maintains posture and balance controlling extensor mm. in limbs

________neural pathway involved in coordinating eye movements, gaze and tracking

A

Direct
lateral vestibulospinaltract (LVST)
medial longitudinal fascicules (MLF)

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9
Q

Motor Functions of Vestibulocerebellum:
_________ pathway: Purkinje cells project to fastigial nuclei
__________ does not directly innervate distal limbs like ________
Directly project to the ________

A

indirect
bilateral medial vestibulospinal tract (MVST) ; LVST
spinal cord

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10
Q

Primary function of the Vestibulocerebellum:

A

postural control/balance/coordination of eye movement

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11
Q

How do mossy fibers modulate Purkinje cell functions?

A

Synapse with granule cells which activate target cells through parallel fibers

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12
Q

Vestibulocerebellum impairment:
What pathway in the brainstem is responsible for coordinating eye movements, specifically CN IiI, IV, and VI?

-Loss of function:

A

Medial Longitudinal Fascicles (MLF)

loss of smooth pursuit (saccades), nystagmus, diplopia

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13
Q

Vestibulocerebellum impairment:
Vestibulospinal tract (CNS) plays a key role in ___________.
Loss of function can leads to:

A

Postural control
truncal ataxia, titubation (truncal tremor)

*refer to jeopardy image

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14
Q

Motor function of the spinocerebellum and pathway:

A

position and movement proximal joints and extremities

afferent through sup. and inf. cerebellar peduncle

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15
Q

Motor function of the cerebrocerebellum and pathway:

A

-motor planning, initial activation pf primary cortex
-timing of muscle contraction
-precise dexterous movement of extremities

afferent through middle cerebellar peduncle to contralat. hemisphere

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16
Q

What signs will the patient present of fastigial nucleus impaired during SCA stroke?

A

impaired postural control/ balance, coordination of eye movement

*SCA supplies vestibulocerebellum
*fastigal nucleus located in vestibulocerebellum

17
Q

Dymestria - hypo/hyper?
Dysdiadochokineasia:
Dysarthia:

A

hypermetria: overshoot
hypometria: undershoot’
fast supination/pronation
slurred speech

18
Q

Somatotopy in cerebellum: ________ representation of body on cerebellum

A

redundant

19
Q

Somatotopy in cerebellum: Invereted ant. lob and seperated posterior lobe. Explain what is mean.

A

Inverted ant. lobe: “upside down”, legs and feet represented in superior/upper anterior lobe and arms and hands represented by inferior/lower anterior lobe.

Separated in posterior lobe: limbs movements and maintenance vs. posture/balance

20
Q

Lost of somatotopy in presentation in cerebropontine tract is more complicated S&S due to

A

connection of motor cortex to the pons in brainstem: controls voluntary movements (face/tongue)

21
Q

What is the circuit between the hypothlamus and cerebellum:
________ fibers
________ nervous system- drives, _____/_____/_____/

A

multilayered
autonomic; fight/fight/rest/digest

22
Q

L SCA stroke:
Somatomotor deficits:
Visceral motor functional impairments: (2)

A

L hand intention tremor
Dilation of L pupil; Flush of L face and warm

*both signs are related to activated sympathetic motor

23
Q

Fastigial nucleus injury: decrease _______ and ________

_______ nerve dominated

A

heart rate and blood pressure

parasympathetic

24
Q

How an the cerebellum modulate ipsilateral motor functions?

A

Superior cerebellar peduncle cross over to contralat. motor cortex but motor cortex goes down ipsilateral side to control same side in CB

25
Q

The ______ & ________ system of the cerebellum involves emotion and behaviors.

A

vermis and limbic

26
Q

What is CCAS:

A

cerebellar cognitive affective syndrome:

27
Q

Does the cerebellum involves ALL the functions of the CNS?

A

Yes

28
Q

Why cerebellar functional loss is rare?

A

somatotopy- redundancy in the topography