Neurodevelopment Flashcards

1
Q

Critical events in neurodevelopment and timeline

A
  1. Neurulation: done by 4 wks
  2. Segmentation and cleavage: done by 8 wks
  3. Proliferation and migration: 8 weeks-birth
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2
Q

Three major events occur in neurulation:

A
  1. Differentiation: neuroectoderm and neural crest
  2. Establish axes of symmetry: cephalic to caudal, ventral to dorsal
  3. Signal molecule gradients
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3
Q

Closure of the neural tube results in formation of which axis?

A

Dorsoventral

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4
Q

What three segments form? And what do they split into?

A
  1. Prosencephalon (forebrain)
    • Telencephalon (basal ganglia, cortex)
    • Diencephalon (thalamus, hypothalamus)
  2. Mesencephalon (midbrain)
  3. Rhombencephalon (hindbrain)
    • Metencephalon (pons, cerebellum)
    • Myelencephalon (medulla)
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5
Q

Three major events in proliferation & migration

A
  1. Evolution of computational capacity
  2. Neuroectodermal precursors
  3. Migration
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6
Q

Which neural tube defects are involved with the anterior neuropore?

A
  • Anencephaly (most severe)

- Encephalocoele

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7
Q

Which neural tube defects are involved with the posterior neuropore?

A
  • Meningomyelocoele
  • Meningocoele
  • Spina bifida occulta (least severe)
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8
Q

Which neural tube defect involves both anterior and posterior neuropore?

A

Arnold chiari malformation

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9
Q

How can neural tube defects be detected in utero? Which neural tube defect cannot be detected in utero?

A

Measure maternal serum alpha fetaprotein (AFP) with confirmation of dysraphia by US

Spina bifida occulta

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10
Q

What are well-documented risk factors for neural tube defects

A
  • Folate deficiency
  • Retinoic acid administration for acne
  • Valoproate for seizures
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11
Q

What is a Dandy Walker malformation

A

Segmentation/cleavage problem - Sites where CSF flow out of ventricle get blocked, blows hole in midline of cerebellum

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12
Q

What is Holoprosencephaly? What chromosomal defect is it associated with?

A

Spectrum of defects of segmentation between prosencephalon into telencephalic hemispheres

Trisomy 13 Patau’s and trisomy 18

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13
Q

What is most minimal lesion of holoprosencephaly

A

Arrhinencephaly - “no nose brain”

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14
Q

What is most severe lesion of holoprosencephaly

A

Alobar holoprosencephaly with cyclopia and other midfacial defects

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15
Q

What three types of defects of proliferation and migration are there?

A
  1. Axonal migration - agenesis of corpus callosum
  2. Gyral pattern formation
    • Lissencephaly - smooth brain - intellectual disability assoc. with seizures (defect of migration)
    • Polymicrogyria - “many small gyri” - only two layers (molecular and neuronal)
  3. Cortical organization - Band heterotopia: double cortex, Focal cortical neuronal heterotopia
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