3.1 Spinal Cord Anatomy Flashcards

1
Q

What is in the epidural space of the spinal cord?

A

Mostly fat

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2
Q

At what vertebral level does doe the spinal cord/pia mater end? What procedure is this important for?

A

L1/L2; important for lumbar puncture (lumbar cistern)

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3
Q

Which vertebrae do the dura and the arachnoid mater extend down to?

A

Second sacral vertebrae

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4
Q

Where is the cauda equina located? What is it inferior to?

A
  • Located in lumbar cistern
  • Inferior to conus medullaris (base of spinal cord)
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5
Q

What are two enlargements of the spinal cord?

A

Cervical: Origin of brachial plexus

Lumbar: Origin of lumbosacral plexus

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6
Q

At what vertebral levels are the lumbar and cervical enlargements?

A

Cervical: C3-T2

Lumbar: L1-S3

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7
Q

Why does the spinal cord not fill the whole vertebral column?

A
  • Spinal cord stops growing at 4
  • Vertebral column grows until adulthood
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8
Q

In terms of fissures/sulci, how do you tell whether you’re looking at the A/P surface of the spinal cord?

A

Anterior: deeper, anterior median fissure

Posterior: shallower, posterior median sulcus

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9
Q

The spinal nerve is formed by the joining of…

A

The dorsal root and the ventral root

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10
Q

How many pairs of spinal nerves are in each of the vertebral sections (e.g. cervical, thoracic etc.)

A

Cervical: 8
Thoracic: 12
Lumbar: 5
Sacral: 5
Coccygeal: 1

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11
Q

What is the area between the dorsal/ventral horns of the spinal cord called?

A

The intermediate zone

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12
Q

The lateral horns of the spinal cord are important for _____ function

A

Autonomic

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13
Q

What are the three pairs of columns in the spinal cord?

A
  • Dorsal
  • Ventral
  • Lateral
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14
Q

What changes grey matter/white matter proportions in different cross sections of the spinal cord?

A

More innervation -> more myelinated axons -> more white matter

More muscles -> more grey matter

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15
Q

What modalities does the DCML tract carry?

A
  • Proprioception
  • Vibration
  • Fine touch
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16
Q

What are the two fascicului of the DCML pathway? Which is medial/lateral?

A

Medial: Fasciulus cuneatus (upper limb)
Lateral Fasciculus gracilis (lower limb)

17
Q

Which modalities does the anterior vs lateral spinothalamic tract carry?

A

Lateral: pain/temp
Anterior: Crude touch and pressure

18
Q

What is the function of the spinocerebellar tract? Where are they found in a lateral cross-section?

A
  • Carry unconscious proprioceptive info ipsilaterally
  • Found on lateral aspect of spinal cord
19
Q

Which of the anterior/lateral corticospinal tract decussates at the level of the pyramids?

A

Lateral decussates. Anterior does not.

20
Q

Corticospinal tract function

A

Voluntary control of musculature

21
Q

What is the function of extrapyramidal motor tracts?

A
  • Involuntary muscle movement
  • Posture, balance, tone etc.
22
Q

What are the four extrapyramidal tracts and their functions?

A
  • Rubrospinal (flexion/inhibition of extension)
  • Vestibulospinal (balance, head and neck position)
  • Reticulospinal (posture and gait)
  • Tectospinal (head and eye movement)
23
Q

Golgi tendon organ vs muscle spindle (location and sensation)

A

GTO: In tendon, detects changes in muscle length

Muscle spindle: In muscle belly, detects changes in muscle stretch/stretch velocity

24
Q

Which of GTO/muscle spindles have mono/polysynaptic afferent pathways to alpha motor neurons?

A

GTO: Poly
Muscle spindle: Mono

25
Q

What are the two types of nerve fibres that provide afferent information from muscle spindles?

A
  • 1a fibres
  • II fibres
26
Q

Give an example of how muscle spindles are used to regulate posture

A

-body begins to fall forward
- Muscle spindle detects decreased stretch/stretch velocity in back muscles
- Causes alpha motor neurons to contract muscle
- Upright again

27
Q

Do golgi tendon organs have efferent innervation? What about muscle spindles?

A

GTOs are located in tendons, so they don’t need to be contracted to maintain sensitivity.

Muscle spindles DO need to be kept at an optimum tension, though, so they do have efferent innervation via gamma motor neurons.

28
Q

Define “spinal reflex”

A

Rapid, involuntary, predicatable movements in response to specific stimuli. Mediated entirely by the spinal cord; no brain involvement.

29
Q

What are the different types of spinal reflexes?

A
  • Stretch
  • Golgi tendon reflex
  • Crossed extensor
  • Withdrawal reflex

(Two pairs: GTO/MS, and Crossed extensor/withdrawal)

30
Q

Describe stretch reflex

A

In response to stretching of muscle, intrafusal muscle spindles are activated, causing alpha motor neuron activation and contraction.

31
Q

Describe golgi tendon reflex

A
  • Tendon tension increases
  • Golgi tendon organs detect, and send afferent signal to inhibit alpha neurons
32
Q

What are crossed extensor reflexes (use an example)

A

Contralateral extensor activation in response to a withdrawal reflex (i.e. stepping on glass, ipsilateral flexor, contralateral extensor)

33
Q

What is a withdrawal reflex?

A

Automatic reflex that moves the body away from painful stimulus