Session 1 Flashcards

1
Q

Appreciate the role of neuroglia

A

90% cell type in brain

Formed of astrocytes, oligodendrocytes, microglia, epemdymal cells

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2
Q

Describe the external appearance of the brain

A

Cerebral hemispheres –> cortex (frontal, parietal, temporal, occipital lobes)
Thalamic masses
Cavities - ventricles
Cerebellum
Brainstem - midbrain, pons, medulla
Grooves = sulci, major sulci = fissure, ridges/elevations = gyri

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3
Q

Describe the external appearance of the spinal cord

A

Swellings for cervical and lumbar plexus

Ends at conus medullaris

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4
Q

Describe the dura and compartments of the cranial cavity

A

Dura mater:
Falx cerebri - sagittally in midline, separates R+L hemispheres
Tentorium cerebelli - roof over posterior cranial fossa, divides into supra/infratentorial

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5
Q

Define the term neural crest and list some neural crest derivatives

A

Neural crest - cells of the lateral border of neuroectoderm tube –> mesoderm –> epithelial to mesenchymal transition
Derivatives - cranial nerves, dorsal root ganglion, para/sympathetic ganglia, connective tissue, odontoblasts, dermis, C cells, heart, melanocytes, adrenal medulla

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6
Q

Describe the timeline of and formation of the neural tube

A

Day 18 - induction of neural plate
Day 19 - elevation of lateral edges to form neural grove
Day 21-23 - neural folds approach and fuse in midline to form neural tube
Day 25 - anterior neuropore closes, shortly followed by (day 28) posterior neuropore

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7
Q

Explain some neural tube defects, how they result and their diagnosis

A

Result from failure of neural tube to close:
Cranially - encephaly
Causally - spina bifida –> hydrocephaly
Failure of neural fold elevation –> rachischisis (complete spina bifida)
Diagnosis - elevated maternal a-fetoprotein, USS
*hydrocephaly readily treatable by use of a shunt

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8
Q

Describe the ventricular system of the brain

A

Interconnected reservoirs filled by CSF

Lateral ventricle –> third ventricle –> cerebral aqueduct –> fourth ventricle

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9
Q

Describe the divisions of the nervous system during neural fold formation

A

Prosencephalon (forebrain)
Mesencephalon (midbrain)
Rhombencephalon (hindbrain)

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10
Q

Describe the divisions of the nervous system at 5 weeks development

A
Telencephalon --> cerebral hemispheres
Diencephalon --> thalamus
Mesencephalon --> midbrain
Metencephalon --> pons, cerebellum
Myelencephalon --> medulla oblongata
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11
Q

Describe the development of the spinal cord and its implication in performing a lumbar puncture

A

In the third month the spinal cord and vertebral column are the same length
After, the vertebral column grows faster, leading to the cauda equina (bundle of spinal nerves)
In a LP procedure, the needle should be inserted at L3/L4 or L4/L5 as it is suitably below the spinal cord (terminates at L1)
In neonates, the spinal cord terminates at L1-L3 so the LP should be performed lower than in adults

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12
Q

Understand how grey and white matter are arranged in the spinal cord, cerebral cortex and sub-cortical aspects of the brain

A
Grey matter - inside, composed of cell bodies, synapses, dendrites, axon terminals, function of the senses and motor control, no myelin sheath 
White matter - outside, composed of axons (nerve fibres), co,poses thalamus, hypothalamus, found between brainstem and cerebellum, allows communication, controls autonomic functions (temperature, blood pressure, heart rate), myelinated 
Dorsal root (back) is where sensory fibres enter
Ventral root (front) is where motor fibres leave
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13
Q

Understand the meaning of the terms ‘nucleus’, ‘ganglion’ and ‘tract’ as used in neuroanatomy

A

Nucleus - a cluster of densely packed cell bodies of neurons in the CNS
Ganglion - a cluster of cell bodies of neurons in the PNS
Tracts - a bundle of axons that connects one part of the nervous system to the other

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14
Q

Appreciate the central and peripheral decisions of the nervous system

A

CNS –> brain/spinal cord
PNS –> somatic –> sensory/motor
PNS –> autonomic –> sympathetic/parasympathetic

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15
Q

Describe important features on the external appearance of the brain

A

Central sulcus - pre central gyrus (motor), post central gyrus (sensory)
Lateral sulcus - division of frontal/temporal lobes

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16
Q

What is the sensory homunculus trying to represent?

A

Topographical representation - increased size = increased sensation (more receptors)
E.g. hand, eye, nose, mouth, tongue