Lecture 1-Intro Flashcards

1
Q

What are the basic components of the CNS?

A
  • cerebral hemispheres
  • brainstem and cerebellum
  • spinal cord
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2
Q

What are the components of the PNS?

A
  • dorsal and ventral roots
  • spinal nerves
  • peripheral nerves
  • ganglia
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3
Q

True or false: the cauda equina is part of the CNS

A

FALSE - PNS because it has dorsal and ventral roots

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4
Q

What is grey matter composed of?

A

Cell bodies and dendrites, highly vascular

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5
Q

What is white matter composed of?

A

Axons and their supporting cells

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6
Q

True or false: grey matter contains axons

A

TRUE

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7
Q

Why is white matter white and grey matter grey?

A
  • white: fatty myelin

- grey: no myelin and highly vascular

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8
Q

What is the PNS equivalent of grey matter?

A

Ganglia

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9
Q

What is the PNS equivalent of white matter?

A

Peripheral nerve

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10
Q

How many segments is the spinal cord composed of?

A

31

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11
Q

What are the layers of the spinal cord?

A

Grey matter in the centre and white matter outside

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12
Q

What is a spinal nerve composed of?

A

Dorsal root (sensory) and ventral root (motor) so spinal nerve is mixed

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13
Q

What is a funiculus?

A

Segment of white matter with multiple tracts and impulses travelling in multiple directions

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14
Q

What is a tract?

A

White matter pathway connecting two distinct regions of grey matter where impulses travel in one direction

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15
Q

What is a fasciculus?

A

Subdivision of a tract supplying a distinct region of the body

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16
Q

How is grey matter in the cord organised?

A

Into cell columns (Rexed’s laminae)

17
Q

What is a nucleus?

A

Collection of functionally related cell bodies (grey matter)

18
Q

What is cortex?

A

Folded sheet of cell bodies found on the surface of the brain surface (grey matter)

19
Q

What is a fibre?

A

Axon in association with its supporting cells, also called axon (white matter)

20
Q

Describe the three types of fibres

A
  • association fibres: connect regions within the same hemisphere
  • commissural fibres: connect left and right hemispheres or cord halves
  • projection fibres: connect cerebral hemispheres with cord/brainstem
21
Q

Where is the primary motor cortex in the brain?

A

Precentral gyrus

22
Q

Where is the primary sensory cortex in the brain?

A

Postcentral gyrus

23
Q

Where is the primary visual cortex in the brain?

A

Calcarine sulcus

24
Q

What is the cingulate gyrus responsible for?

A

Emotion and memory

25
Q

What is the fornix?

A

Major output pathway from the hippocampus

26
Q

What is the tectum?

A

Dorsal part of midbrain involved in involuntary responses to auditory and visual stimuli

27
Q

What is a cerebellar tonsil?

A

Part of the cerebellum that can herniate and compress the medulla

28
Q

What are brain ventricles?

A

Cavities in the brain

29
Q

What is a choroid plexus and where is it found?

A

Found in the ventricles, makes 600-700 ml of CSF per day.

30
Q

How do the lateral ventricles drain into the third ventricle?

A

Interventricular foramen

31
Q

What is the tube between the third and fourth ventricles called?

A

Cerebral aqueduct

32
Q

Where does the fourth ventricle drain?

A
  • Two lateral apertures
  • Midline aperture
  • Central canal of spinal cord
33
Q

How does CSF eventually enter the venous system?

A

Aperture -> subarachnoid space -> arachnoid granulation in superior sagittal sinus -> dural venous sinus -> venous blood