Lecture 17 & 18 - Neural Flashcards
(95 cards)
what is the somatic motor system?
controls motor commands and concious decisions to make a specific movement
- planning stage, then movement
what is the process of the somatic motor system?
decision in frontal lobes -> motor association area -> basal ganglia and cerebellum -> primary motor cortex (interlinked with bg and cb)
what is the purpose of the basal ganglia and the cerebellum?
to coordinate and give controlled movement
describe the primary motor cortex?
- contains pyramidal cells from layer 5 of the cerebral cortex that synapse with the brain stem or spinal cord
- info regarding movement coordination are sent to the pyrimidal cells from the brain stem, or other regions of the cortex
where is the motor homunculus?
on the primary motor cortex
which regions of the body require large representation of the motor homunculus?
larger representation of areas that require finer motor control
- face and hands
motor pathways are a __ neuron pathway
2
- upper motor neurons and lower motor neurons
what are the two pathways for the 2 neuron pathway of motor control?
- either synapse within the midbrain/mesencephalon with cranial nerve nuclei (collections of LMNs in the brainstem) to control the face, head and neck CORTICOBULBAR TRACT
- or synapse at the somatic motor nuclei of the spinal cord to control the lower body CORTICOSPINAL TRACT
what is the pathway through the brain and spinal cord to get to the skeletal muscles of the face?
The corticobulbar tract
cerebral cortex (1º motor) -> travel down the cerebral peduncle of the brainstem -> then decussate (cross over) and synapse at cranial nerve nuclei
what is the pathway through the brain and spinal cord to get to the skeletal muscles of the upper limb?
also pass through cerebral peduncle, but continue into the lower medulla oblongata and decussate at the pyramids to form the lateral corticospinal tract (LCT)
what percentage of UMNs that travel to the lower part of the body travel via the LCT?
85% controlling distal muscles
what is the pathway through the brain and spinal cord to get to the skeletal muscles of the proximal/axial muscles?
dont decussate at the lower medulla oblongata and instead decussates at the level of the spinal cord
what are proprioreceptors?
important for recognising where our muscles are in space
what is the function of muscle spindle proprioceptors?
they are important for recognising muscle length
what is the function of golgi tendon organ proprioceptors?
sense tension in the muscles
- prevent damage of the muscle due to overexertion (something is ‘too heavy’)
what is the somatosensory system?
different receptors in our skin that have different structure or anatomy, or different locations in the skin
- touch, pressure
- pain and temperature
what are the five main types of receptors in the somatosensory system?
- free nerve endings (light touch, pain and temp
- Merkel cells and tactile discs (fine touch (fine detail about very small things touching our skin)
- tactile corpuscles (vibration)
- lamellated corpuscles (vibration)
- ruffini corpuscles (pressure)
which receptors are close to the skin surface?
free nerve, merkel and tactile discs, and tactile corpuscles
describe the pathway of the 1º sensory neuron
from exteroreceptors, through the ventral ramus, into the dorsal root ganglion (cell body) and synapses in the spinal cord or brainstem
what type of neuron is the 1º sensory neuron and why?
pseudounipolar neuron - cell body at central axon but off to the side - synapses with both receptors at the periphery and with neurons in the spinal cord or brainstem
what is sensory modality?
the type of sensory information - e.g touch and pressure vs pain and temperature
what are the five main sensory tracts and their pathways (3 neuron pathways)?
- posterior-column (proprioception, fine touch, pressure, vibration)
- anterior spinothalamic tract (crude touch and pressure)
- lateral spinothalamic tract (pain and temperature)
- posterior and lateral spinocerebellar tracts (info to cerebellum)
what is the common location where the sensory modality pathways end?
the thalamus
describe receptive fields of neurons
they are the area that one sensory neuron modality can sense. they do not overlap, and areas where we need to take in more fine detailed sensory information have smaller receptive fields and more neurons that on places like our back, which will have larger receptive fields