The Reticular Formation Flashcards

1
Q

Define arousal and consciousness

A
  • Arousal - the emotional state associated with some kind of goal or avoidance of something noxious
  • Consciousness - ‘awareness’ of both external world and internal states
    - Requires cortex and reticular formation
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2
Q

Describe the reticular formation, including its inputs and outputs

A
  • A population of specialised interneurones in the brainstem
  • Numerous inputs regulate the level of arousal from sensory system and cortex
    • Difficult to sleep with lots of stimulus/sensation
  • Widespread outputs - thalamus, hypothalamus, basal forebrain nuclei, spinal cord
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3
Q

Describe the relationship between the cortex and reticular formation

A
  • Has a positive feedback loop with cortex - as cortex signalling increases, reticular formation signalling increases which further increases cortex signalling
  • Keeps people awake
  • Shuts down in sleep
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4
Q

Describe the reticular activating system

A
  • A large part of the reticular formation is devoted to arousal - reticular activating system
  • Output to basal forebrain nuclei and then to cortex using ACh neurotransmitter
    • Anticholingergic drugs cause drowsiness - inhibit stimulatory output
  • Output to hypothalamus and then to cortex using histamine
    • Antihistamines also inhibit excitatory ascending fibres
  • Output to thalamus and then to cortex using glutamate
  • ACh, histamine and glutamate are all excitatory - maintain consciousness by keeping cortex awake
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5
Q

State how consciousness can be assessed

A
  • Glasgow coma scale

- EEG

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6
Q

Describe what is assessed from the Glasgow coma scale

A
  • Eye opening
  • Motor response
  • Verbal response
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7
Q

Describe what an EEG is

A
  • EEG - electroencephalogram
  • Measures the combined activity of thousands of neurones in a given part of the cortex
  • Deprived of sensory input, neurones in the brain tend to fire synchronously (sleep)
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8
Q

Describe the EEG of a person who is awake

A
  • ß waves when awake and eyes open
  • Random and fast waves
  • ~50Hz, irregular (brain processing many inputs)
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9
Q

Describe the EEG of a person who is awake but has their eyes closed

A
  • α waves
  • slower synchronised waves
  • ~10Hz, regular (no input to brain so synchronised)
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10
Q

Describe the EEG of a person who is at stage 1 sleep

A
  • Background α waves with θ waves

- θ waves ~5Hz (longer than α waves)

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11
Q

Describe the EEG of a person who is at stage 2/3 sleep

A
  • Background θ waves with sleep spindles and K-complexes
  • Sleep spindles - thalamus trying to wake you up (fast, large waves)
  • K-complex - input taken away so brain produces intrinsic waves (slow large waves)
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12
Q

Describe the EEG for person in stage 4 sleep

A
  • δ wave ~1Hz

- All synchronised neurones as all stimulus removed, so amplitude increased

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13
Q

Describe what REM sleep is and how its EEG looks like

A
  • REM (rapid eye movement) sleep - similar to ß waves

- Dreaming - eyes produce imaginary input to brain

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14
Q

Describe the neural mechanism of sleep

A
  • Involves deactivation of reticular activating system (and hence cortex) and inhibiting thalamus
    • Positive feedback loop between RAS and cortex inhibited, leading to decreased cortical activity
  • Inhibition of positive feedback loop assisted by removal of sensory inputs
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15
Q

Describe the paradox of REM sleep

A
  • REM sleep is initiated by groups of neurones in the pons
  • EEG activity is similar to that seen during arousal (ß-waves), however person is difficult to rouse due to strong inhibition of thalamus
  • Muscle tone in most of body is lost due to descending inhibition of LMN by glycinergic fibres arising from the reticular formation
  • Eye movements and some other cranial nerve functions are preserved (eg. Nocturnal bruxism - teeth grinding)
  • Autonomic effects are seen including penile erection and loss of thermoregulation
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16
Q

Describe some disorders of sleep

A
  • Insomnia - trouble sleeping
    • Likely due to psychological disorders - depression, anxiety
  • Narcolepsy - excessive sleepiness, hallucinations
  • Sleep apnoea - soft tissue around neck compress trachea
    - Constantly waking up due to hypoxia
17
Q

Describe some disorders of consciousness

A
  • Brain death - widespread cortical and brainstem damage
    • Flat EEG
  • Coma - widespread brainstem and cortical damage, with various EEG patterns detectable
    • Unarousable and unresponsive to psychologically meaningful stimuli
    • No sleep-wake cycle detectable
  • PVS (persistent vegetative state) - widespread cortical damage, with various EEG patterns detectable
    • Similar to coma, but some spontaneous eye opening - can localised to stimuli via brainstem reflexes
    • Sleep-wake cycle detectable
  • Locked in syndrome - can be caused by basilar/pontine artery occlusion
    • Eye movements preserved, but all other somatic motor functions lost from the pons down