limbic system Flashcards

limbic system: explain the structure and function of the limbic system, and identify the functional effects of lesions to individual components of the limbic system

1
Q

what is the limbic system anatomically

A

structurally and functionally interrelated areas (rim of limbus of cortex adjacent to corpus callosum and diencephalon) considered as single functional complex, with no parts acting in isolation

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2
Q

4 functions of limbic system

A

maintain homeostasis, agonistic (defence and attack) behaviour, sexual and reproductive behaviour, memory (emotional processing)

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3
Q

3 ways the limbic system maintains homeostasis

A

via activation of visceral effector mechanisms, modulation of pituitary hormone release and initiation of feeding and drinking

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4
Q

subcortical structures of limbic system

A

olfactory bulb, hypothalamus (inc. mamillary bodies), amygdala, hippocampus (in floor of inferior horn or lateral ventricle), thalamus, frontal lobe

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5
Q

what imaging can indicate what happens in disorders of limbic system

A

functional e.g. diffusion tensor imaging

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6
Q

name and source of afferent pathway of hippocampus

A

perforant pathway from entorhinal cortex with fibres from all over going across it

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7
Q

source of efferent pathway of hippocampus

A

to fimbria, which breaks away to fornix

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8
Q

2 functions of hippocampus

A

memory, learning

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9
Q

2 diseases associated with the hippocampus

A

Alzheimer’s disease, epilepsy

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10
Q

location of hippocampus, and structure of it

A

seahorse shape in wavy structure of medial temporal lobe (hippocampus -> fornix -> mamillary bodies, with amygdala anterior)

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11
Q

diagram of hippocampal circuitry

A

diagram

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12
Q

where does Alzheimer’s disease (cortical atrophy) start, and effect on temporal and frontal lobes, and ventricles

A

starts at transentorhinal cortex and hippocampus, with temporal lobe atrophic first, then frontal lobes, causing ventricles to enlarge

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13
Q

progression of Alzheimer’s disease (early -> moderate -> late), and clinical significance

A

predictable by spread and symptoms; early (entorhinal cortex and hippocampus, with short-term memory problems) -> moderate (parietal lobe with disorientation and dressing apraxia) -> late (frontal lobe with loss of decision-making skills)

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14
Q

Alzheimer’s plaques vs tangles

A

amyloid plaques are clusters that form in spaces between nerve cells; neurofibrillary tangles are a knot of brain cells

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