Internal Anatomy of the Brainstem 1 Flashcards

1
Q

What is the reticular formation?

A

Diffuse network of loosely packed neurons without distinct boundaries, forming central core of brainstem

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2
Q

What critical functional areas does the reticular formation contain?

A

Arousal

Sleep/wake cycle

Pain

Motor function

Respiratory/Cardiovascular

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3
Q

What pattern generator circuits does the reticular formation contain?

A

Conjugate eye movements

Chewing

Swallowing

Vomiting

Breathing

Locomotion

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4
Q

What kind of information is carried in the dorsal column/medial lemniscus pathway?

A

Fine touch (two-point discrimination)

Vibration

Conscious propioception

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5
Q

Where is the first central synapse in the medial lemniscal pathway?

A

Afferents traveling in the fasciculus gracilus synapse in the nucleus gracilus

Afferents traveling in the fasciculus cuneatus synapse in the nucleus cuneatus

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6
Q

Describe the pathway of second order neurons from the medial lemniscal pathway

A

Travel ventrally and decussate at the level of the nuclei, then they ascend, forming the medial lemniscus

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7
Q

How do somatosensory afferents from the face join the medial lemniscal pathway?

A

They enter through the chief sensory nucleus

From there, second order neurons cross in the mid-pons and join the medial lemniscus

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8
Q

What is the trigeminal lemniscus?

A

Second order sensory fibers from the face

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9
Q

How does the orientation of the medial lemniscus shift?

A

Dorsal to ventral in the lower medulla

Medial to lateral orientation in the mid-pons

Ventromedial orientation in the midbrain

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10
Q

What type of information does the anterolateral system carry?

A

Pain, temperature, and crude touch

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11
Q

Where does the anterolateral pathway decussate?

A

Level of entry in the spinal cord

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12
Q

What is the pathway of anterolateral nerves from the face?

A

Enter the brainstem through the trigeminal nerve

Descen ipsilaterally through the spinal trigeminal tract to the appropriate somatotopic level, then synapse on second order neurons

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13
Q

Describe the corticospinal pathway

A

Originates in the motor cortical areas

Travels through the internal capsule into the crus cerebri, through the basal pons and then forms the pyramids with the corticobulbar pathway

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14
Q

Where do the corticobulbar fibers terminate?

A

One of the brainstem motor nuclei to regulate LMNs for CNs V, VII, IX, X, or XII

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15
Q

What are the two exceptions to bilateral corticobulbar innervation?

A

LMNs for the lower half of the face only receive contralateral input

LMNs innervating the genioglossus muscle only receive contralateral input

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16
Q

What results from a unilateral lesion of UMNs targeting the facial motor nucleus?

A

Weakness of the lower half of the face on the contralateral side

17
Q

What results from a unilateral lesion of UMNs targeting the hypoglossal nucleus?

A

Contralateral weakness of the genioglossus

Tongue deviates tot he weak side, contralateral to the lesion

18
Q

Describe the pathway of corticopontine fibers

A

Originate from all four lobes of the cerebral hemispheres

Fibers descend to the level of the pons where they synapse on neurons in the grey matter of the basal pons

Pontine nuclei axons cross the midline and reach the contralateral cerebellum

19
Q

What is the medial longitudinal fasciculus?

A

Well defined pathway that links nuclei controlling the extraocular muscles with horizontal and vertical gaze centers, the vestibular nuclei, and the spinal cord

20
Q

What functions does the medial longitudinal fasciculus support?

A

Cinjugate horizontal eye movements

Vestibulo-ocular reflexes

Vestibulo-spinal reflexes

21
Q

What are the functions of the two vestibulospinal pathways?

A

Maintain posture against gravity, reflexive adjustments in motor function in response to vestibular signals

22
Q

What is the pathway and function of the medial vestibulospinal pathway?

A

Originates in the medial vestibular nucleus and descends bilaterally in the medial longitudinal fasciculus

Facilitates reflexes and tone for muscles of the neck

23
Q

What is the pathway and function of the lateral vestibulospinal pathway?

A

Originates in the lateral vestibular nucleus and descends uncrossed in the anterior funiculus to all levels of the spinal cord

Facilitates reflexes and tone for extensor muscles

24
Q

What is the pathway and function of the pontine reticulospinal pathway?

A

Descends uncrossed in the medial longitudinal fasciculus, then enters the anterior funiculus and innervates all spinal levels

Facilitates voluntary and reflexive activity of axial and limb muscles

25
Q

What is the pathway and function of the medullary reticulospinal pathway?

A

Descends uncrossed posterior to the inferior olives, enters the anterior funiculus of the spinal cord, innervating all spinal levels

Inhibits voluntary and reflex activity of axial and limb muscles

26
Q

What is the pathway and function of the tectospinal pathway?

A

Originates in the superior colliculi, decussate and descends anterior to the medial longitudinal fasiculus

Functions thought to be coordination of head and eye movements, stimulation of reflex movements in response to visual stimuli

27
Q

What is the pathway and function of the rubrospinal pathway/

A

Originates in the red nucleus located in the midbrain tegmentum

Fibers decussate and descen through the lateral medulla into the lateral funiculus

Projects to the cervical and thoracic levels, facilitates flexor muscles and inhibits extensors for the upper limbs

28
Q

What is the cause and result of decorticate posturing?

A

Typically caused by a large lesion of cerebral hemispheres that causes a loss of cortical input.

Results in upper limb flexion and lower limb extenstion

29
Q

What is the cause and result of decerebrate posturing?

A

Large lesion of the cerebral hemispheres that expand into the midbrain, and rostral pons

Loss of activity of rubrospinal pathway

Upper and lower limb extension

30
Q

Why do lesions affecting the anterolateral system also tend to cause horner’s syndrome?

A

The descending sympathetic pathway has a lateral location in the brains stem, close to the anterolateral system