Overview of Nervous System Flashcards

1
Q

What are the four functions of the nervous system?

A
  • Gather sensory information from internal/external environment
  • Integrate information for assessment and meaning
  • Produce a response
  • Regulate body homeostasis for optimal performance
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2
Q

What are the three types of neuron and what do they do?

A
  • Afferent = takes information from PNS to CNS
  • Interneuron = relays information
  • Efferent = takes response from CNS to PNS
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3
Q

What are the components of a typical neuron?

A

o Dendrite = collects information
o Cell body = synthetic centre
o Axon = conducts action potentials from cell body to other neurons or effector organ
o Axon terminal = release neurotransmitter onto other neurons (or effector organ)

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4
Q

What are the six categories that most neurons fall into? (see picture in lecture notes for corresponding numbers)

A
o	Sensory neurons (1)
o	Motor neurons (2)
o	Preganglionic autonomic neurons (3)
o	Postganglionic autonomic neurons (4)
o	Local interneurons (5)
o	Projection neurons (long interneurons) (6)
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5
Q

Where are glial cells found and what do they do?

A
Satellite cells
- Support cell bodies in PNS
Schwann cells 
- Secrete neurotrophic factors in PNS
- Form myelin sheaths in PNS
Oligodendrocytes
- Form myelin sheaths in CNS
Microglia (modified immune cells)
- Act as scavengers to remove dead cells, etc in CNS
Astrocytes (in CNS)
- Provide substrates for ATP production
- Help form blood-brain barrier
- Secrete neurotrophic factors
- Take up K+, water, neurotransmitters
- Source of neural stem cells
Ependymal cells (in CNS)
- Source of neural stem cells
Create barriers between compartments
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6
Q

How do glial cells contribute to neurological disease?

A
-	Most brain tumours are gliomas
o	Glial cells can undergo mitosis
	Schwannoma, astrocytoma, ependymoma and oligodendroglioma
-	Epilepsy
o	Often caused by malfunction in glial cells (astrocyte scar) in a region where neuronal damage has taken place
-	Alzheimer's disease
o	Tau in astrocytes and oligodendrocytes
-	Multiple sclerosis
o	Autoantibodies attack oligodendrocytes
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7
Q

What are the anatomical axes/planes of the spinal cord?

A
  • Dorsal = posterior
  • Ventral = anterior
    o Example dorsal horn is the posterior horn and where sensory axons enter
    o Example ventral horn is anterior horn and location of lower motor neuron cell bodies
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8
Q

What is white matter? What is grey matter? What are nuclei and ganglia?

A
  • Grey matter
    o Neuronal cell bodies, dendrites, axon terminal, synapses and is highly vascular
  • White matter
    o Bundles of myelinated axons mainly
  • Groupings of neuronal cell bodies
    o Nucleus – cranial nerve nuclei in brainstem
    o Ganglion – usually outside of CNS and sensory cell bodies such as the dorsal root ganglia
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9
Q

What are the 3 embryonic brain regions? What do these split into and what brain structures do they become later on?

A

Forebrain
- Splits into telecephalon (becomes cerebrum) and diencephalon (becomes diencephalon, e.g. hypothalamus, thalamus, epithalamus)
Midbrain
- Splits into mesencephalon (becomes midbrain - part of brainstem)
Hindbrain
- Splits into metencephalon (becomes pons and cerebellum) and myelencephalon (becomes medulla oblongata)

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10
Q

What does the adult ventricular system consist of?

A
  • A series of interlinked fluid filled chambers
  • 4 chambers – 2 lateral ventricles and then the 3rd and 4th ventricles
  • Basal ganglia nuclei and thalamus are in close proximity to the ventricles
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11
Q

What are the cerebral lobes and their functions?

A
  • Frontal lobe
    -> Problem solving, emotional traits, reasoning (judgment), speaking, voluntary motor activity
  • Temporal lobe
    -> Understanding language, behaviour, memory, hearing
  • Brain stem
    -> Breathing, body temperature, digestion, alertness/sleeping, swallowing
  • Parietal lobe
    -> Knowing right from left, sensation, reading, body orientation
  • Occipital lobe
    -> Vision, colour perception
  • Cerebellum
    -> Balance, coordination and control of voluntary movement, fine muscle control
    (See image on lecture notes)
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12
Q

What are the Brodmann areas?

A
  • Identified 52 distinct regions of the cerebral cortex
    o Many based on neuronal organisation that have since been correlated with function
    o 44-45 = Broca’s
    o Part of 22 = Wernicke’s
    o 1, 2 and 3 = primary somatosensory cortex
    o 4 = primary motor cortex
    (see image in lecture notes)
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13
Q

What are the cerebral cortexes?

A
-	Specific regions within the lobes have specific functions
o	Many match up to the Brodmann areas
- Motor cortex
- Gustatory cortex
- Olfactory cortex
- Insula
- Auditory cortex
- Sensory cortex
- Visual cortex
(see image in lecture notes)
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14
Q

Where do primary motor and sensory signals come from? How are they separated? Which side of the brain controls which parts of the body?

A
Primary motor = frontal lobe
-	Primary sensory = parietal lobe
-	Separated by the central sulcus
o	Precentral gyrus and postcentral gyrus
-	Left cerebral hemisphere communicates with right side of body
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15
Q

When will Wernicke’s area light up in brain imaging? What about Broca’s area? How are these connected? Where are these located?

A
  • Wernicke’s area
    o Comprehension / understanding of written and spoken language
    o Brodmann area 22
  • Broca’s area
    o Language production
    o Brodmann area 44-45
  • Connected by arcuate fasciculus (white matter tract)
  • Both in dominant left hemisphere
  • Right side has both areas as well but has different purpose
    o Grammar, sentence construction emotion, inflection (right brain damage causes monotonous speech)
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16
Q

What do the left and right cerebral hemispheres control?

A
  • Left cerebral hemisphere controls right side of the body
    o But also logic, analysis of facts, understanding of production of language
  • Right cerebral hemisphere controls the left side of the body
    o Imagination, rhythm, holistic thinking, non-verbal language, emotion in language
17
Q

Which brain hemisphere is dominant?

A

Left (even in left-handed people)

18
Q

What is the major tract, the corpus callosum?

A
  • Corpus callosum connects cerebral hemispheres
    o 250,000,000 axons
  • Extends from enlarged genu in frontal lobe to enlarged splenium in parietal lobe
    (see lecture notes for images)
19
Q

What is the major tract, the anterior commissure and internal capsule?

A
  • Anterior commissure connects the temporal lobes
  • Internal capsule runs between lenticular nucleus (basal ganglia) and thalamus / head of caudate
    o Route through which information travels to and from cerebral cortex to subcortical sites
20
Q

What is the thalamus?

A
  • Lies on either side of the 3rd ventricle
    o Forms wall of 3rd ventricle
  • Receives input from ALL areas of the nervous system
    o Gateway to the cortex
21
Q

What is the limbic system, what is its function, and what are its components?

A
-	5th lobe of the brain
o	Supports functions such as:
	Emotion, behaviour, long term memory  and olfaction
-	Hippocampus
o	Spatial memory, learning
-	Amygdala
o	Episodic auto-biographical memory
o	Attentional and emotional processes
o	Social processing
22
Q

Which situations may trigger the amygdala?

A
  • Frightening situations—or even memories of such situations—activate the amygdala, as shown in this functional magnetic resonance image (fMRI) of the left side of the brain of a person experiencing fear.
23
Q

What may result from damage to the limbic system>

A
  • Damage to hippocampus from exposure to stress hormones or long-term glucocorticoids disrupts explicit memory
  • Amygdala (Kluver-Bucy syndrome) not afraid of anything, forget things rapidly, place things in their mouths, strong sex drive and inappropriate
24
Q

Where do most cranial nerves originate from? What do they consist of and what are their functions?

A
  • Most of cranial nerves originate from brainstem
    o Except CN I, II
  • Ascending and descending tracts
  • Sympathetic descending axons
  • Integrative functions (reticular formation)
25
Q

How many cranial nerves are there? What are the cranial nerve nuclei?

A
  • 12 pairs of cranial nerves
    o 10 have motor and or sensory nuclei in brainstem
  • Medial-lateral location of nucleus is predicted by the sulcus limitans
    o Sensory nuclei lateral, motor nuclei medial
  • Longitudinal location related to the attachment of the cranial nerve to brainstem region
    o Rule of 4