10 - Reticular Formation and Consciousness Flashcards

1
Q

What is the definition of consciousness and arousal?

A
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2
Q

What does consciousness require?

A

Cortex and Reticular Formation connected by reciprocal excitatory projections, forming a positive feedback loop

Consciousness = cortex + reticular formation

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3
Q

What is the reticular formation and how does it maintain consciousness?

A
  • Population of specialised interneurones in the brainstem.
  • Reticular activating system devoted to arousal

- Inputs: sensory system (e.g hot room) and cortex (e.g own thoughts)

- Outputs: thalamus (glutamate), hypothalamus (histamine), basal forebrain nuclei (Ach), spinal cord (regulates muscle tone)

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4
Q

Why do antihistamines and anticholinergics have drowsiness as a side effect?

A

They block the excitatory neurotransmitters being released from the hypothalamus and the basal forebrain nuclei so less stimulation of consciousness/awakefulness

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5
Q

What is the basis of the Glasgow Coma Scale that is used to assess the level of consciousness?

A
  • Best is 15, worst is 3
  • Eye opening spontaneously would means normal cortical and brainstem function
  • Eye opening in response to speech would mean lower level of cortical function but brainstem still good
  • Eye opening to pain would mean cortex damaged as pain is a reflex in brain stem
  • No response suggest severe damage to brainstem
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6
Q

What is an electroencephalogram used for?

A
  • Measures the combined activity of thousands of neurones in a given part of the cortex to a high temporal resolution but low spatial resolution
  • MRI gives better spatial resolution but low temporal resolution
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7
Q

What is neural synchrony?

A
  • Synchronous oscillations of membrane potentials in a network of neurons connected with electrical synapses (gap junctions).
  • Considered to be the neural correlate of consciousness
  • Happens in sleep (deprivation of sensory input) and epilepsy
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8
Q

What are the different stages of sleep?

A
  • Usually cycle through sleep 6 times in a night
  • Dream in REM
  • As you go down the stages the EEG shows decreased frequency and increased amplitude as the neurones become synchronous
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9
Q

What do each of the scorings for the motor and verbal response of the GCS mean?

A
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10
Q

What would you see on the EEG in each stage of sleep?

A
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11
Q

What is the mechanism of non-REM sleep?

A

- Deactivation of reticular activating system (and hence cortex) + inhibition of the thalamus

  • This deactivation is facilitated by removal of sensory inputs e.g tv off (fewer positive influences on positive feedback loop)
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12
Q

What is the mechanism of paradoxical REM sleep?

A
  • Initiated by neurones in the pons

- Similar EEG to when awake with eyes open (beta waves), but difficult to rouse due to strong thalamic inhibition

- Decreased muscle tone due to glycinergic inhibition of lower motor neurones

- Eye movements and some other cranial nerve functions can be preserved (e.g. teeth grinding)

- Autonomic effects seen (e.g. penile erection, loss of thermoregulation)

  • Essential for life – long term deprivation leads to death
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13
Q

What are the functions of sleep?

A
  • Generally unknown
  • Energy conservation / repair?
  • Memory consolidation?
  • Clearance of extracellular debris?
  • ‘Resetting’ of the CNS?
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14
Q

What are some common sleep disorders?

A
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15
Q

What is the pathology behind the following disorders of consciousness:

  • Brain death
  • Coma
  • PVS
  • Locked in Syndrome
A

PVS is when a patient is in a vegetative state for more than 4 weeks, they are in a state of partial arousal

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16
Q

A 26-year-old female presents with double vision when looking to her left-hand side. She is normally fit and well except for an episode of paraesthesia in her left arm 6 months ago and right foot 2 years ago. Both of which resolved spontaneously within 24 hours and no medical attention was sought at the time.

Suggest a suitable diagnosis and explain why she has diplopia on left lateral gaze.

A

- MS so plaques often form in medial longitudinal fasiculus

  • Left lateral rectus/abducens and right medial rectus/oculomotor need to contract to move left
  • Allows for conjugate movement
  • Also, inhibition of contralateral extraocular muscle movement
  • Without the medial longitudinal fasiculus she cannot do this
17
Q

As you perform a lumbar puncture the patient complains of paraesthesia over the lateral aspect of the right foot, what have you hit?

A

Right S1 dorsal root

18
Q

If someone has a chronic raised ICP what can you do?

A
  • Drain some fluid off using lumbar puncture
  • Lose weight
  • Diuretics
19
Q

A 45 year old woman is admitted following a stab wound to her back. She has sustained a complete hemisection of the left side of her spinal cord at the level of L3.

What is the pattern of sensory loss that may be expected?

A
  • Complete paraesthesia at the level of L3
  • Ipsilateral loss of dorsal column modalities (e.g vibration) from L3 down
  • Contralateral loss of spinothalmic modalities from L4 down
20
Q

Identify the following structures.

A

* = caudate nucleus

A = Putamen

B = Global Pallidus

C = Thalamus

21
Q

What nuclei make up the striatum and the lentiform nucleus?

A

Striatum: caudate nucleus and putamen

Lentiform: putamen and global pallidus

22
Q

A 54 year old male has a known syringomyelia at T6 and gradually develops loss of pain and temperature bilaterally from T6 down. What is the precise structure in the spinal cord that has been affected?

A

Ventral white commisure

23
Q

A 45 year old patient is undergoing surgery for resection of a brain tumour. After the operation they have loss of sensation in all modalities in their left foot. From which site was the tumour removed?

A

Right, medial, post-central gyrus

24
Q

When you have nystagmus what does the fast phase show you?

A

Fast phase goes towards the lesion