Cerebral Cortex II Flashcards

1
Q

Label the lateral brain.

A

Slide 4.

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2
Q

What is most of the cortex composed of?

A

Association areas (that will interpret and analyze the information). See slide 6.

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3
Q

Describe the language localization of the brain.

A

Broca’s area (motor area of speech, produces language) and Wernicke’s area are connected through arcuate fasciculus which helps the two areas communicate

L hemisphere is dominant for language (around the lateral fissure)

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4
Q

Describe how to clinically test for aphasic syndrome of Broca motor area.
Verbal fluency, repetition, comprehension, and naming.

A
Lesion site 1
Verbal fluency: nonfluent
verbal repetition: poor
verbal comprehension: good
verbal naming: poor
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5
Q

Describe how to clinically test for aphasic syndrome of Wernicke’s area (sensory).
Verbal fluency, repetition, comprehension, and naming.

A
Lesion Site 2
verbal fluency- fluent
verbal repetition- poor 
verbal comprehension- poor 
verbal naming- poor
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6
Q

What is reticular formation?

A

coordination network for the brainstem nuclei

network within the brainstem, though it continues rostrally into the thalamus and hypothalamus and caudally into the propriospinal network of the spinal cord

a “coordinating system” (Like the limbic system) with “connections” to sensory, somatic motor and visceral motor systems

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7
Q

Describe what the reticular formation receives and generates. Discuss its unique cytoarchitecture.

A

receives specific premotor afferents
generate coordinated output to nearby motor or sensory nuclei

unique cytoarchitecture (allows convergence of somatosensory information and divergence of efferent outputs)

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8
Q

Discuss the range of functions of the reticular formation.

A

pattern generator (eye, chewing, swallowing, coughing, sneezing, locomotor)

centers for respiratory/CV/micturition control (basic autonomic function)

nociception

More detail:

  1. Pattern generator
    - eye movements; horizontal (PPRF) and vertical (riMLF)
    - rhythmical chewing movements (pons)
    - posture and locomotion (midbrain and pons)
    - swallowing, vomiting, coughing and sneezing (medulla)
    - micturition (pons)
  2. Respiratory control (medulla); expiratory, inspiratory, apneustic and pneumotaxic
  3. Cardiovascular control (medulla); vasomotor pressor/depressor, cardioacceleratory and inhibitory
    - afferents arise from baroreceptors (carotid sinus and aortic arch), chemoreceptors (carotid sinus, lateral reticular formation chemosensitive area in the medulla) and stretch receptors (lung and respiratory muscles)
    - efferents arise from RF neurons within the pons and medulla
  4. Sensory modulation or “gate” control
    - term “gating” refers to “modulation” of synaptic transmission from one set of neurons to the next
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9
Q

Describe the organization of the reticular formation. How is it subdivided? Give details.

A

Subdivided into three neuronal “cell columns” (medial to lateral) as well as on the basis of their neurotransmitter release
Neuronal columns:

median (midline) reticular formation - Diffuse Modulatory System
-essentially a column of serotonergic neurons (series of raphe nuclei)

paramedian reticular formation (contains the largest cells) - “efferent” zone (Effector Zone)
Locations: medulla (Ventral reticular nucleus and Gigantocellular reticular nucleus
pontine (Caudal pontine nucleus and PPRF)
midbrain (mesencephalic)

Lateral reticular formation “afferent” zone (sensory zone)
extends from medulla to pons
receives collaterals from all sensory pathways including special senses
projects to the paramedian zone

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10
Q

Describe the RF afferents.

A

Primarily project to the gigantocellularis, caudal and oral pontine nuclei - the medial or paramedian group

  1. Corticoreticular- motor and premotor cortex onto neurons of origin of the reticulospinal tract (medial group), provides mechanism of cortical feedback
  2. Tectoreticular - superior colliculi origin
  3. Cranial nerves (trigeminal, vestibular, auditory and CN IX and X) - project to the lateral parvocellular area
  4. Cerebelloreticular -primarily from the fastigal nucleus
  5. Spinoreticular - receives collaterals from spinothalamic tract, widespread bilateral distribution, no somatotopy
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11
Q

Describe RF efferents.

A

(arise from the gigantocellularis, caudal and oral pontine nuclei - the medial group)

Spinal cord termination - pontine and medullary reticulospinal tracts

  • descend bilaterally, terminate in intermediate gray of spinal cord
  • effect on axial muscles of posture and locomotion

Brain stem termination - reticulobulbar tract and Central tegmental tract

  • indirect to cranial nerve motor/sensory nuclei, direct to dorsal column and parasympathetic nuclei
  • thalamus, hypothalamus, basal forebrain nuclei, amygdala, medial septal nuclei
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12
Q

Describe the Diffuse Modulatory Systems. Where do they lie? What does it play a role in?
What projects to it?

A
  • Lie around the borders of the RF
  • Cytoarchitecture is different than RF
  • = Ascending Reticular Activating System (ARAS) - a role in level of alertness, sleep-wake rhythms and alerting (startle) reactions)
  • Play a role in activation of the cerebral cortex, but there are other “participants” :
    1. cholinergic neurons close to the locus ceruleus
    2. orexin (neuropeptide) - tuberomammillary body
    3. acetylcholine secreting neurons - basal nucleus of Meynert

Cerebral cortex projects to the DMS

  • influences alertness (as can visual, auditory and mental imagery)
  • inhibits other sensory input, allows focusing of attention
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13
Q

Diffuse Modulatory System

What is the function of the serotonergic and adrenergic systems?

Where do they originate from?

A
  • sleep and arousal mechanisms
  • integrative behavioral and neuroendocrine functions
  • modulate actions of other neurotransmitters
  • brain growth and development
  • pain suppression

Substantia nigra and ventral tegmental nucleus- dopamine
raphe nuclei- serotonin
Locus ceruleus- noradrenaline

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14
Q

Describe Raphe nuclei. What is it an origin of? What does it receive afferents from?

A

(important in the diffuse modulatory system) SEROTONIN

Largest territorial distribution of any CNS neurons
midbrain- projects to cerebral cortex
pons- ramifies in brainstem and cerebellum
medulla- projects to spinal cord

origin of serotonergic projections to widespread areas of cerebral cortex, cerebellum, brainstem and spinal cord. Afferents from cerebral cortex, hippocampus, hypothalamus and periaqueductal gray.

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15
Q

How are raphe nuclei different than RF?

A
  1. the neurotransmitter they release (serotonin)
  2. widespread projection throughout the brain

(can wake up whole cortex, or turn off…)

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16
Q

Describe locus ceruleus.

A

aminergic neurons in reticular formation

origin of noradrenergic (noradrenaline, norepinephrine) projections to all areas of the CNS (via the central tegmental tract, median forebrain bundle, dorsal longitudinal fasciculus and SCP)

afferents from other reticular nuclei, PAG, hypothalamus, amygdala and prefrontal cortex

17
Q

What is consciousness?

What is the content/level?

A

(state of self-awareness in which it is possible to direct attention and manipulate abstract ideas)

Content- reflects activity/interactions of different cortical areas
Level- dependent on diffuse modulation projections

18
Q

Describe in a broad sense how the diffuse modulating system maintains consciousness. Name the chemical secreted from each location and where it is projected.

Raphe nuclei
LC
Midbrain RF
Tuberomammillary nucleus
Lateral hypothalamus
Basal nucleus of Meynert
A

Raphe nuclei (serotonin) - cortex and thalamus
LC (norepinephrine) - cortex and thalamus
Midbrain RF (acetylcholine) - thalamus
Tuberomammillary nucleus (histamine) - cortex and thalamus
Lateral hypothalamus (orexin) - cortex and thalamus
Basal nucleus of Meynert (acetylcholine) - cortex

19
Q

Describe the role of sleep.

A

restoration and recovery
consolidation of memory and daily experiences
brain growth and development

brain anabolism (synthesis of glycogen)
tissue repair
"rest" for the body and brain
energy conservation
strategies for prey and predator
programming of innate behavior 

(lack of sleep linked to Alzheimer’s - diff chemicals in our brains get washed out when we sleep)
(dendritic spines hang around - cramming for a test doesn’t produce dendritic spines)

20
Q

Describe the mammilian circadian system.

A

Diagram slide 24.

21
Q

Describe REM/Non-REM

EEG
Muscle tone
arousal level
mental activity
autonomic activity
A

enter REM 60-90 min into sleep
can wake up quick from REM …brain cycles rapidly between REM/nonREM

Non-REM
EEG - large amplitude, slow frequency, synchronized
Muscle tone- decreased
arousal level- progressively higher
mental activity- vague dreams
autonomic activity-increased parasympathetic, slow regular pulse and respiration

REM
EEG- low amplitude, fast frequency, desynchronized
Muscle tone- almost abolished
arousal level- highest
mental activity- detailed, visual, emotional dreams
autonomic activity- increased sympathetic, irregular pulse and respiration

22
Q

Discuss/diagram the regulation of sleep-wake cycles.

A

See slide 28.

suprachiasmatic nucleus (hypothalamus) talks to preoptic area (hypothalamus) which has feedback with medullary reticular formation…both medullary RF and preoptic area turn off wakefulness network (includes ACH, histamine, norepi, orexin, serotonin) which then has effect on REM machinery (pons) and sends input to thalamus

23
Q

Discuss orexin and its role in sleep regulation.

A

narcolepsy- have lost these orexin neurons in brain (autoimmune disorder that damages the orexin…so their sleep gets screwed up (people who develop narcolepsy go into REM rapidly- they may act out their dreams)

with cataplatic attacks- lose motor tone when get excited
Orexin sends effernts to basal forebrain, tuberomammillary nucleus, ventral tegmental area, raphe nuclei, Laterodorsal and pedunculopontine tegemental nuclei, and LC