Hypothalamus Flashcards

1
Q

Tracts that relay neural info from the hypothalamus to the SNS

A
  1. Dorsal longitudinal fasiculus
  2. Medial forebrain bundle
  3. Mammillotegmental tract
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2
Q

Direct vs Indirect pituitary pathways

A

Direct:
Posterior
(ADH/vasopressin + oxytocin)
- made by SON/PVN, and stored in terminals until they release DIRECTLY into general circulation

Indirect:
Anterior pituitary
- Hormones made by anterior pituitary –> released into hypothalamopituitary portal circ –> Ant. Pit regulate release of these hormones from peripheral endocrine organs

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3
Q

Lesion of which part of the hypothalamus results in aggressive behavior, and which for placid behavior?

A

Aggressive:
- medial hypothalamus

Placid:
- lateral hypothalmic tract + mamillary region

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4
Q

When the hypothalamus is disconnected from higher brain areas, but remains connected to brainstem and SC, what behavior is seen?

A

Extreme aggression, irritation over inappropriate stimuli

SHAM RAGE

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5
Q

Disconnecting hypothalamus from brainstem does what to behavior?

A

abolishes sham rage

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6
Q

Which is designated to tell you that your body is too hot vs too cold?
- Ant vs post hypothalamus

A

Anterior:
tell you, that you are too hot
- lesion = hyperthermia

Posterior:
too cold
- lesion = hypothermia

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7
Q

Which hormone increases resting rate of heat production?

A

Thyroxin increases basal heat production

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8
Q

Brown fat in babies important why?

A

NE is released by brown fat cells by symp nerve fibers.
–> allows for uncoupled oxidative phosphorylation
(nonshivering thermogenesis to fight hypothermia)

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9
Q

How does the hypothalamus regulate thirst and sweat?

A

Aldosterone: promote reabsorption of Na+ from sweat

Greater thirst (blood is hypertonic sooner)

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10
Q

Role of PAOH on the posterior hypothalamus?

A

Inhibits

PAOH is tonically active at nL body temp
- Firing rate of POAH cells depend on local temperature is PAOH

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11
Q

What happens to POAH cells when temp drops below a set point?

A

POAH inhibits posterior hypothalamus

Inhibiting POAH would reduce their firing rate –>
releasing post. hypothalamus from cells from inhibition.
- greatly potentiating heat gain.

(normally POAH would respond to higher body temps by increaseing firing rate above normal, pt feels hot, and sweats until body temp falls)

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12
Q

Satiety center

A

Ventromedial nucleus

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13
Q

Primnary circadian clock in body

A

Suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN)

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