Cranial Fossae, Meninges, venous sinuses and bleeds Flashcards

1
Q

what is the space outside of the dura mater called?

A

extra dural space

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2
Q

what are the three layers of meninge?

A

Dura mater, Arachnoid Mater, and Pia mater

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3
Q

what does meninx mean?

A

membrane

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4
Q

What is ‘genio’ latin for?

A

chin

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5
Q

what are the two layers of the dura mater?

A

periosteal layer

meningeal layer

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6
Q

where is the meningeal layer of the dura mater often adhered to?

A

it’s often adherent to the periosteal layer of the dura mater

though, the layer does move away form this periosteal layer often and it forms a compartment in the brain creating the falx cerebelli and falx cerebri and the tenorium cerebelli

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7
Q

as a result of the infolding of the meningeal layer of the dura mater, what do we get?

A

the tentorium cerebelli, falx cerebri, and falx cerebelli -

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8
Q

As a result of the gaps between the dura, where does venous blood move through?

A

the dura mater then contains ‘dural sinuses’ which are channels for venous drainage of the brain

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9
Q

where does the superior sagittal sinus run? Where does the inferior sagittal sinus run? What joins the two?

A
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10
Q

what are the sinuses of the dura of the brain?

A

inferior sagittal

superior sagittal

straight

right transverse

sigmoid

inferior petrosal

superior petrosal

cavernous sinus

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11
Q

The sigmoid sinus is continuous with what large vein?

A

it is continuous with the internal jugular vein

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12
Q

what plexus drains into the caverna sinus?

A

the pterigoplexus and the opthalmic veins

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13
Q

The cavernous sinus contains what?

A

internal carotid

abducens nerve (6)

maxillary nerve (5b)

opthalmic nerve (5a)

trochlear nerve (4)

oculomotor nerve(3)

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14
Q

what is the role of the 3rd cranial nerve?

A

-Occulomotor- responsible for the pupillary reflex

and motor innervation for four muscles of the eye

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15
Q

What muscle of the eye does trochlear nerve innervate?

A

Superior O….

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16
Q

What does the opthalmic and Maxillary devision of the trigeminal never

A

opthalmic looks after sensation of the forehead

Maxillary looks after sensation of the cheeks

17
Q

What does the abducens nerve innervate?

A

LR6

it abducts the eyes

18
Q

why do we call the region of the nose and the upper cheeks the ‘danger zone’

A

b/c if a clot is formed in this region, the patient will experience

  • loss of sensation of the forehead and cheek
  • papillary reflex lost
  • loss of movement of the eye
  • opthalmic exosthalmic? protrusion of the eyeball
19
Q

where do the superior and inferior petrosal sinuses drain into?

A

superior petrosal drains into transverse sinus

inferior petrosal drains into the sigmoid sinus

20
Q

between the cerebellum and the posterior cerebrum, what space sits between them?

A

the tentorium cerebelli

21
Q

where is the cerebrospinal fluid produced?

A

in the ventricles -

22
Q

what is the lateral ventricle made up of?

A

anterior horn of lateral ventricle, body of lateral ventricle, and the posterior horn of the lateral ventricle

23
Q

a lot of the CSF will pass out of what foramen into the subarachnoid space?

A

out of the foramen Magendie and the Foramina of Lushka

24
Q

where is the CSF primarily reabsorbed into circulation?

A

superior sagittal sinus- by the ingrowth into the sinus called arachnoid villi/granulations

25
Q

as the mater sweeps over the brain and brainstem - there are larger gaps between the subarachonoid space and the brain itself - this makes larger gaps for pooling blood called the ‘cisterns’ - what are the ‘cisterns’ in the brain?

A

•Cisterns

–Interpeduncular

–Pontine

–Quadrigeminal

–Cisterna magna

26
Q

where do you find the interpeduncular cistern and the cisterna magna?

A
27
Q

where does an extradural haematoma usually occur?

A

–Usually in temporal / tempero parietal region

–Occasionally results from damage to sagittal / transverse sinus

  • May have short period of Loss of consciousness
  • Lucid interval- fully oriented, they know who they are and what day it is etc…
  • Rapid deterioration within 24 hours
28
Q

are extradural haematomas venous or arterial?

A

most of the time they are arterial - unles shtey result from a tear to the sinus in which case they are venous

29
Q

subdural haematomas- are they acute or chronic?

A

they are usually associated with a chronic syndrome- predominantly occur in infancy and in the elderly

trauma is likely to be a cause of this, although a hisotry of this is not always obtained (ex. in an older person, they may have hit their head against a door and this normally wouldn’t be a problem, but they have atrophy of the brain and a small trauma may be enough to tear the subdural space

30
Q

what is hydrocephalis?

A

enlargement of the ventricles

31
Q

Chronic subdural haematomas are specific or non-specific

A

they are usually non-specific associatedd with chronic venous bleeds - though they could potentially present accutely

32
Q

from what does a subarachnoid haemorrhage develop?

A

bleedig from the intracranial vessels in the subarachnoid space - usually associated with aneurysms (usually weakening in tunica media muscle wall)

33
Q

are subarachnoid haemorrhages acute or chronic?

A

usually they are acute - associated with a transient or prolonged loss of consciousness - they’ll describe it as a sudden ‘worst headache you’ve ever experienced’

over the a couple days you’ll see neck stiffness, decreased consciousness, seizures, papilloedema (swelling at back of eye), reactive hypertension, and pyrexia (temperature)