Peripheral Sensory and Spinal Cord Flashcards

1
Q

Proprioception receptors

A
Muscle spindles (Ia and II)
Imbedded in postural muscles + others
Gamma motor neurons also which contract muscle spindles so they maintain sensitivity
Golgi tendon organs are the other proprioceptor and they have fascicles with connective tissue around them
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2
Q

Touch receptors

A

All are A-beta fibres
Merkel disks: fine touch and pressure
Meissner corpuscles: fine touch, pressure and low frequency vibration
Pacinian corpuscles: pressure and vibration
Ruffini endings: deep pressure

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3
Q

Pain/temperature receptors

A

Free nerve endings (A-delta)

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4
Q

Pain/temperature/itch receptors

A

Unmyelinated free nerve endings (C fibres)

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5
Q

Types of nociceptors

A
  1. Thermal nociceptors (>45 or <5) - thinly myelinated A-delta fibres
  2. Mechanical nociceptors, mostly A-delta, intensely pressure-sensitive
  3. Polymodal nociceptors from intense mechanical/chemical/thermal stimuli with C fibres
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6
Q

Taste bud cell types

A
  • Type I (50%) unknown, ?salty
  • Type II (30%) bitter, sweet and umami
  • Type III (2-20%) sour
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7
Q

Tract where spinothalamic tracts decussate

A

Lissauer’s tract (gives a few spinal levels up or down)

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8
Q

Functional organization of the spinal cord

  • Dorsal horn
  • Lateral horn
  • Ventral horn
A

Dorsal: sensory
Lateral: autonomic
Ventral: motor

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9
Q

Medial lemniscus path (senses, decussation, processing and relay)

A

Light touch, vibration and proprioception
Decussate at medullary pyramids
Processed by ventral thalamic nuclei according to nature/origin
Relayed by thalamic nuclei to the primary sensory cortex

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10
Q

Anterolateral pathway (senses, decussation)

A

Anterior & lateral spinothalamic tracts
Pain, temperature and crude touch
Decussate seems immediately (Lissauer’s tract)

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11
Q

Spinocerebellar tracts (parts, senses, decussation)

A

Anterior and posterior spinocerebellar tracts
Proprioception to the cerebellum
Anterior crosses 2x
Posterior does not cross

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12
Q

Neural development:

  • Neural plate
  • Start of brain
A

Neural plate at 18 days

Start of brain at 24 days

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13
Q

Primary to secondary brain bits (primary are prosencephalon, mesencephalon and rhombencephalon)

A

Prosencephalon - telencephalon and diencephalon
Rhombencephalon - metencephalon and myelencephalon
Mesencephalon stays the same

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14
Q

Brain stem development: neuron migration

A

Sensory go laterally

Motor go medially

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15
Q

Telencephalon structures (2)

A

Cerebral hemispheres

Basal ganglia

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16
Q

Diencephalon structures (2)

A

Thalamus

Hypothalamus

17
Q

Mesencephalon

A

Links forebrain and hindbrain

Contains cerebral aqueduct

18
Q

Metencephalon (2)

Myeloncephalon (1)

A

Metencephalon: cerebellum and pons
Myelencephalon: medulla

19
Q

Lentiform nucleus structures?

Striatum structures?

A

Putamen and globus pallidus

Caudate and putamen

20
Q

Fibre tract of hemispheres:

  • Commissural
  • Association
  • Projection
A

Commissural: between hemispheres. Corpus callosum, anterior commissure and posterior commissure
Association: arcuate and longitudinal fasiculi
Projection fibres: internal capsule

21
Q

Dura mater (tissue type, layers, folds, veins, spinal layers)

A

Dense, fibrous connective tissue (tough and inelastic)
2 layers - periosteal layer connects to inside of cranium, inner meningeal layer invaginates to the folds
Folds: falx cerebri (longitudinal fissure), falx cerebelli (partially separates cerebellar hemispheres), tentorium cerebelli (occipital lobe from cerebellum), diaphragmata sellae above pituitary
Veins drain to sagittal sinuses and eventually the jugular vein
Spinal dura is single-layered as the periostal layer doesn’t go beyond the foramen magnum.

22
Q

Arachnoid mater (material, space, pierces the dura)

A

Avascular, continuous, fibrous elastic connective tissue
Has cisterns over larger spaces
Has subarachnoid space (CSF and blood) beneath
Sticks through dura at dural sinuses to diffuse CSF into venous blood

23
Q

Pia mater (function)

A

Helps produce CSF

Encapsulates blood vessels through the subarachnoid space to the cortex

24
Q

Walls of the lateral ventricles

A

Roof: corpus callosum
Medial wall: septum pellucidum
Lateral wall: parietal lobe

25
Q

Drainage of deep veins

Drainage of superficial veins

A

Deep - inferior sagittal sinus - straight sinus
Superficial - superior sagittal sinus

Both converge to internal jugular veins

26
Q

Corticospinal AKA pyramidal tract

A
Voluntary controlled skill movements
Lateral tract (90%) decussates at pyramids
Anterior/ventral tract does not
27
Q

Brain stem layers: tectum

A

Roof (midbrain only)

Superior and inferior colliculi

28
Q

Brain stem layers: tegmentum

A

Reticular formation
Most cranial nerve nuclei
Some ascending/descending tracts

29
Q

Brain stem layers: anterior structures

A

Pyramids
Olive
Basal pons and cerebellar peduncles
Some tracts

30
Q

Structures in the caudal midbrain

A

Substantia nigra
Inferior colliculi/lateral lemniscus
Crus cerebri (descending fibres)
Decussation of superior cerebellar peduncles

31
Q

Structures in rostral midbrain

A

Superior colliculi
Periaqueductal grey
Red nucleus