Brain Intro Flashcards

1
Q

Name the coloured bones of the skull

A
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2
Q

State the function of the frontal lobe

A

Muscle control

higher intellect

personality

mood

social conduct

language

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3
Q

What structure separates the frontal lobe from the parietal lobe?

A

Central sulcus - “separates sensing from doing”.

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4
Q

State functions of the parietal lobe

A

Peception of sensory information such as touch, pain and pressure

Language

Calculation

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5
Q

State functions of temporal lobe

A

Memory

Language

Hearing

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6
Q

State functions of occipital lobe

A

Processing of visual stimuli

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7
Q

What separates the temporal lobe frombasically everything else?

A

The lateral sulcus

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8
Q

What is the name of the gyrus where you would find the motor cortex?

A

The precentral gyrus

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9
Q

Name of gyrus that is where you would find the somatosensory cortex? What lobe?

A

Post gentral gyrus.

Parietal

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10
Q

The temporal lobe is the “thumb” when thinking of the brain as a hand. It has 3 gyri, what are they called?

A
  • Superior
  • Middle
  • Inferior
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11
Q

Identify the central sulcus (and thus identify the precentral and postcentral gyrus)

A
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12
Q

State the function of the cerebeullum

A
  • Multiple roles, but key in fine tuning and coordination of muscle movement that is initiated by the motor cortex
  • Also plays role in planning and learning of skilled movements through connections with the thalamus and cortex
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13
Q

Explain what this is showing

A
  • Essentially the size of the limbs on the map determine the motor and sensory imput for that particular part of the body
  • Note that the motor and sensory areas of the cortexes tend to run in parallel
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14
Q

The most common upper motor neurone problem that would affect the legs would be in the spinal cord. However it is possible a tumour in the brain can also affect the function of the legs. Knowing the location of the limbs on the Homonculus (and thus where they are represented in the sensory and motor cortexes), where would a tummour be that it could affect both legs?

A

In the longitudial fissue - essentially presses bilatrally against both sensory/motor cortexes.

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15
Q

The dominant side of the brain is, typically, determines what hand dominant you are (save from picking up hand dominance from something like a sport. Would you expect to find speech also on the dominant area?

A

yes

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16
Q

The frontal lobe has 3 gyri. What are they called?

A

Superior, middle and inferior fronttal gyrus

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17
Q

State the function of broca’s area and specify its anatomical location.

A
  • Inferior frontal gyrus of the frontal lobe, in the pars opercularis and pars triagnularis
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18
Q

What region is required to process auditory information and where is it located?

A

The auditory cortex

  • Found bilaterally
  • In the Superior temoral gyrus
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19
Q

What is the function of wernicke’s area?

Which hemisphere for 90% of population?

Where is it anatomically?

A
  • Sensory language, i.e. understanding of language
  • 90% is left
  • Temporal lobe, superior temporal gyrusish
20
Q

What presentation would you expect in a patient with damage to broca’s area?

A
  • Expressive aphasia (comprehension remains but not-fluent, slow speech)
21
Q

Wernicke’s area is found where, and is a part of what cortex?

A

Superior temporal gyrus

22
Q

State expceted presentation of wernicke’s area lesion (let’s say due to middle cerebral artery stroke)

A
  • Receptive aphasia
  • Can still speak but poor comprehension
23
Q

Ouline very briefly the process of interpreting a sound to forming a verbal response

A
  • Sounds are relayed from the ear to the auditory cortex
    • Signals are sent to wernicke’s area, where the signal can be interpreted
  • Relayed to broca’s area, which is able to control, via the corticobulbar contract, control the bulbar muscles, and possibly also the diaphragmatic muslces required for breathing
  • Parts of the non-dominant parietal lobe appear to contribute to non-verbal aspects of language in recognising meaningful intonation patterns
24
Q

Label the following sturctures in this coronal section of the brain

A
25
Q

The basal ganglia is a collection of 5 neuronal structures. When they go wrong clinically, they cause movement disorders. Name the 5 structures

A
  • Body of caudate nucleus
  • Substantia niagra
  • Putamen
  • Globus pallidus
  • Thalamus
26
Q

Parkinsons disease affects motor activity and motor control. Which basal ganglia structure does it affect?

A

Substantia niagra

27
Q

What is the corpus striatum

A
  • Collection of structures in the basal ganglia;
  • The Caudate nucleus
  • The Putamen
  • Globus pallidus (as part of the lentiform nucleus)
28
Q

Identify the strcutures

A
29
Q

Broadly state the role of the basa ganglia

A

Important for posture and voluntary mvoement

Also connected to the limbic system, which goven the expression of various behaviours and motivational states.

30
Q

Identify the following structrues of the basal ganglia

A
31
Q

What two structures does the lentiform nucleus comprise of?

A
  • Globus pallidus
  • Putamen
32
Q

Label the following structures of the basal ganglia

A
33
Q

Amygdala function?

What system is it a part of?

Is an extension of what sturcture?

A
  • Limbic system
  • Is thought to play important roles in emotion and behavior. It is best known for its role in the processing of fear. Can send signals to the hypothalamus to trigger fight or flight response.
  • Caudate nucleus
34
Q

State the ventricles

A
  • 2 lateral ventricles
  • Third ventricle
  • Fourth ventricle
35
Q

CHECK MINDMAP FOR VENTRICLES

A
36
Q

Identify this green structure

A

Hippocampus

37
Q

State the function of the hippocampus

What system is it a part of?

Which lobe?

A
  • Limbic system
  • Temporal lobe
  • Important in memory function (hippocampal onset epilepsy, beginning of seizure will be in a physical return to memory in some patient
38
Q

The corpus callosum can be split into 4 regions

A

Rostrum

Genu

Body
Splenium

39
Q

Identify the ventricles

A
40
Q

Identify the brain structures in this mid-line hemisection

A
41
Q

State the functions of Thalamus and hypothalamus

A
  • Thalamus (paired structure) - relay cenytre for sensory information travelling from spinal cord to the brain
  • Hypothalamus - links the nervous system to the endocrine system via the pituitary gland. Important for body teperature, nhunger, sleep, circadian rhytyms.
42
Q

Ascending tracts will go through what important brain structures to reach the sensory cortex?

A

Stops in the thalamus, via the internal capsule

43
Q

This an inferior view of the brain. name these structures

A
44
Q

What is the function of most of the cranial nerves that come from the pons?

A

Eye movement, facial movement, facial sensation

45
Q
A