week 4 Flashcards

1
Q

T or F: the CNS is our most understood organ system

A

false – least understood*

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2
Q

T of F: the CNS is mostly composed of neurons

A

false – 75-90% glial cells

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3
Q

5 types of glial cells

A
  1. astrocytes
  2. ependymal cells
  3. microglia
  4. oligodendrocytes
  5. schwann cells (PNS)
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4
Q

T or F: glial cells are excitable

A

false – non-excitable

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5
Q

role of astrocytes? (8)

A
  1. mop up neurotransmitters from synaptic cleft (ex. glutamate; high amounts = toxic!)
  2. maintain electrolyte composition of interstitial fluid (esp K+)
  3. protect neurons from toxins + oxidative stress
  4. contribute to glutamine synthesis + glycogen storage
  5. aid development of connections bw nervous and non-nervous tissue (esp baby neurons)
  6. direct development of special capillaries that contribute to BBB
  7. communicate to neurons through chem messengers
  8. possibly modulate synaptic activity
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6
Q

role of microglia? (3)

A
  1. work with astrocytes to protect neurons from toxins
  2. protect CNS via phagocytosis
  3. protects CNS from oxidative stress
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7
Q

what are the physical supports of the CNS?

A
  1. bones (cranium and vertebral column)
  2. meninges (dura mater, arachnoid matter, pia mater)
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8
Q

where is the sub-arachnoid space? what is its function?

A

where: between AM and PM

function: shock absorber

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9
Q

what is reticular formation? what do athletes wear to protect the RF?

A
  • RF: loose nerve cells at brainstem that connect brain + behaviour
  • athletes wear mouth guards to protect the RF because violent shaking of the jaw causes disruption of the RF.
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10
Q

what is CSF secreted by? what are its functions (2)

A
  • CSF secreted by ependymal cells of choroid plexus (circulates thru ventricles to subarachnoid space and is reabsorbed by arachnoid villi).
  • functions: 1) cushion, 2) maintain stable interstitial fluid environment
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11
Q

T or F: ventricles are all connected

A

true!

{CSF made in choroid plexus and then flows thru lateral ventricles –> third ventricle –> cerebral aqueduct –> fourth ventricle –> central canal –> subarachnoid space… eventually drains into sinuses or veins via villi}

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12
Q

what is a spinal tap?

A

lumbar puncture to collect CSF (this region has no spinal cord proper, so do here to avoid damage)

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13
Q

what do we mean when we say the CSF is recycled 3 times/day?

A

that it’s like a cleansing system, ie dead cells/tissues get dumped back into general circulation

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14
Q

why does CNS account for 2% of total body weight yet receive 15% of blood supply?

A
  • brain uses 20% oxygen and 50% of glucose and cannot story glycogen, therefore depends on blood flow for energy
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15
Q

what is the blood-brain barrier? what is it made of?

A
  • physical barrier that exists between the blood and CSF
  • made of capillaries which are the actual site of exchange between blood and interstitial fluid
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16
Q

parkinson’s disease is a lack of dopamine resulting in muscle issues, twitching, repetitive movements. why can’t we just inject dopamine?

A

due to BBB, injecting dopamine will not reach brain. need to inject L-dopa, which DOES cross BBB! converts to dopamine once inside.

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17
Q

diff bw a typical capillary vs brain capillary?

A

brain capillaries contain tight junctions while typical capillaries have pores

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18
Q

CNS: cluster of neurons = ___ and clusters of myelinated axons = ___.

PNS: cluster of neurons = ___ and clusters of myelinated axons = ___.

A

CNS: nuclei, tracts
PNS: ganglia, nerves

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19
Q

is grey matter on the outside or inside? white matter?

A

brain: grey outside, white inside.

spinal cord: grey inside, white outside.

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20
Q

how many pairs of spinal nerves do we have? name them

A

31…

C1-C8 Cervical
T1-T12 Thoracic
L1-L5 Lumbar
S1-S5 Saccral
C0 Coccygeal

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21
Q

what is a dermatome? what are they useful for?

A
  • sensory region of skin, served by a spinal nerve.
  • useful for locating areas of damage.
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22
Q

in the spinal cord, grey matter is divided into functional halves. what are these halves/their functions?

A

dorsal (facing back) half: sensory functions

ventral (facing stomach) half: motor functions

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23
Q

describe afferent and efferent fibers in the spinal cord

A

AFFERENT: 1) originate in periphery as sensory receptors. 2) terminate in dorsal horn (cell bodies located in dorsal root ganglia).

EFFERENT: 1) originate in ventral horn. 2) travel to periphery and form synapses with skeletal muscles (their cell bodies are in the spinal cord).

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24
Q

what is referred pain? why does this happen?

A
  • activation of nociceptors in viscera produces pain that has been “referred” to the body surface.
  • occurs because second-order neurons that receive input from visceral afferents also receive input from somatic afferents.
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25
Q

describe the activity of ascending tracts in the spinal cord?

A
  • send info from spinal cord to brain.
  • ex: touch a thorn. touch receptor gets activated. terminate in dorsal horn.
26
Q

describe the activity of descending tracts in the spinal cord?

A
  • send info from brain to spinal cord.
  • ex: travel from ventral horn to skeletal muscles.
27
Q

all tracts are bilateral. when a pathway remains on the same side as its origin, it is called ___. When a path- way crosses to the side opposite its origin, it is called ___.

A

ipsilateral
contralateral

28
Q

parts of forebrain (2)

A
  1. cerebrum (cerebral cortex + basal nuclei).
  2. diencephalon (thalamus, hypothalamus).
29
Q

main parts of brain besides forebrain? (2)

A
  1. cerebellum
  2. brainstem (midbrain, pons, medulla)
30
Q

functions of cerebellum? (3)

A
  1. motor coordination and balance.
  2. coordination of eye and body movements.
  3. muscle tone.
31
Q

functions of brainstem (2) and all its parts (3)?

A
  • brainstem connects forebrain and cerebellum to spinal cord.
  • processing center for 10/12 pairs of cranial nerves.

midbrain: connects to forebrain.
pons: connects to cerebellum.
medulla: connects to spinal cord.

32
Q

what are the cranial nerves?

A

idk if u need to know this

33
Q

cerebral cortex functions (5)

A
  • perception of environment
  • forming ideas
  • recalling past
  • commanding body movements
  • integration
34
Q

gyri vs sulci

A

gyri = ridges
sulci = grooves

35
Q

lobes of cerebrum?

A
  1. frontal (primary motor cortex, language, planning)
  2. parietal (somesthetic sensations + proprioception)
  3. occipital (visual processing)
  4. temporal (auditory processing)
36
Q

FRONTAL and PARIETAL lobes separated by ___

A

central sulcus

37
Q

TEMPORAL separated from frontal/parietal lobes by ___

A

lateral sulcus

38
Q

diff between motor and sensory homunculus

A

motor: regions of body with greatest # of motor innervation represented as big

sensory: areas with highest # of sensory receptors represented as big

39
Q

what are cortical association areas?

A

areas involved in more complex processing that require integrating different types of information

40
Q

what is brain lateralization?

A

sensory: right brain perceives left input and vice versa.

motor: right brain controls left muscles and vice versa.

41
Q

functions of thalamus? (2)

A
  1. integrate sensory and motor information (except smell)
  2. sensory relay to cortex
42
Q

functions of hypothalamus? (4)

A
  1. food intake
  2. thermoregulation
  3. neuroendocrine
  4. suprachiasmatic nucleus
43
Q

what are the structures of the limbic system (4)? the limbic system’s functions (3)?

A
  1. amygdala (fear, memory)
  2. hippocampus (learning, memory)
  3. fornix
  4. cingulate gyrus
  • learning
  • emotions
  • behaviour
44
Q

wernicke vs broca’s area

A

wernicke: language comprehension

broca: language expression

45
Q

T or F: mechanisms of sleep are deeply understood

A

false – poorly understood!

46
Q

what is a circadian rhythm?

A
  • day/night cycle governed by neuronal oscillators which have ~24 hour cycle.
  • retinal ganglion cells contain melanopsin, detect input (blue/green light = day, red = night).
47
Q

retinal projection to…

A

a) suprachiasmatic nucleus
b) pineal body

48
Q

what are some circadian functions (6)

A
  1. hormone synthesis and secretion
  2. body temp
  3. autonomic behaviours
  4. mood
  5. alertness
  6. sleep-wake cycle
49
Q

nickname for SCN

A

master clock

50
Q

what is the SCN modulated by (3)

A
  1. retinal input
  2. pineal input (seasons)
  3. reticular activating systems (serotonin)
51
Q

what system is the pineal body activated by? what does it secrete?

A
  • sympathetic system (in darkness)
  • melatonin (blocked by small amounts of blue light)
52
Q

sleep center vs waking center

A
  • sleep center: in ventrolateral preoptic nucleus of anterior hypothalamus: activated by 1) circadian clock; 2) sleep debt
  • waking center in tuberomamillary nucleus histamine activating system: excitatory
53
Q

what is orexin/hypocretin activated by (1)? what does it do (2)?

A
  • activated by SCN
  • facilitates histaminergic neurons in waking center + stabilizes waking state
54
Q

ultradian rhythm?

A

90 minute sleep cycle

55
Q

describe stages of sleep

A

stage 1 SWS –> stages 2–4 in order –> about 1 hour, go in reverse order –> REM sleep (total = ~90 mins)

  • spend less time in deeper stages of SWS and more time in REM sleep as sleeping continues.
56
Q

why is REM called paradoxical sleep?

A

more likely to awaken spontaneously during REM sleep than at any other time.

57
Q

what is sleep atonia? why does it occur?

A
  • during REM, the lack of body movement, only eye movements.
  • spinal motor neurons all hyperpolarized.
58
Q

how does the wake state continue the ultradian rhythm?

A

expressed thru alertness/mood (“biorhythm”)

59
Q

associative vs non-associate learning?

A

a) conditioning (associating 2 stimuli)

b) habituation, sensitization

60
Q

procedural vs declarative memory?

A

a) learned behaviour; automatic response. CEREBELLUM INVOLVED.

b) learned info, requires conscious effort. HIPPOCAMPUS INVOLVED.

61
Q

what is LTP?

A
  • repetitive stimulation of a particular synapse, leading to increase synapse strength.
  • increases likelihood that synaptic input will trigger an AP.
62
Q

describe LTP at biochemical level (6)

A
  • glutamate binds to AMPA and NMDA.
  • NMDA receptors = Ca channels open…
  • AMPA receptors = Na channels open…
  • NMDA receptors closed by Mg ion blocking pore
  • need to stimulate with high levels of activity to remove Mg block
  • NMDA needed for LTP initiation, while AMPA needed for expression