ch 13
cervical plexus
C1-C5
brachial plexus
C5-T1
reciprocal inhibition
The simultaneous contraction of one muscle and the relaxation of its antagonist to allow movement to take place. hamstring cant contract while quad is contracting
tendon reflex
collagen fibers get squeezed together tightly and send signals to brain to not contract as strongly.
functions of spinal cord
conduction, neural integration, locomotion, reflexes
crossed extension reflex
contraction of extensor muscles in the limb opposite from the one that is withdrawn to balance equilibrium
stretch reflex
coordination between synergist and antagonist muscles. quad gets stretched, quad flexes. muscle spindles get stimulated and sends signals to cerebellum and cerebellum sends signals back to muscle.
meninges of spinal cord
dura, arachnoid, pia
the anterior horns
in the spinal cord, the somas of the lower motor neruons are found in
posterior ramus
innervates muscles and skin of back
anterior ramus
innervates the anterior and lateral skin and muscles of the trunk and gives rise to nerves of the limbs
long roots
make up cauda equina L2-C1
gamma motor neurons
nerve fibers that adjust the tension in a muscle spindle are called
spinal tracts
sensory- asending. motor- desending
the obturator nerve
the brachial plexus gives rise to all of the following nerves except
none of them
the intercostal nerves between the ribs arise from which spinal nerve plexus
epineurium
the outermost connective tissue wrapping of a nerve is called the
white matter
axons. highways for axons. no synapses
reticulospinal
balance and posture of arms and legs. desending pathway of blocking pain signals D
vestibulospinal
balance and posture of head and body D
pelvic
which of these is not a region of the spinal cord
lumbar plexus
L1-L4
sacral plexus
L4-S4
spinothalamic tract
1st comes in thru posterior root and synapses with 2nd in gray matter, decussates across to go in white matter, and shoots all the way up to thalamus where it synapses with 3rd to go to cortex
gracile and cuneate tract
1st comes in thru posterior root in the G/C fasciculus and goes up to G/C nucleus in medulla to synapse with the 2nd. the it goes thru and out of the medial lemniscus and shoots up to thalamus where it synapses with 3rd to go to cortex
they are monosynaptic
All somatic reflexes share all of the following properties except
corticospinal tract
UMN- signals start with pyramidal cells in primary motor cortex. the axon travels down to anterior medulla where both decussate (that forms medullary pyramids) and go to white matter on spinal and travel down and cross to gray matter to synapse with LMN to leave thru anterior root to a skeletal muscle
polysynaptic reflex arc
a pathway that signals travel over many synapses on their way back to the muscle. involves an interneuron
spinothalamic MC
a patient has a gunshot wound that caused a bone fragment to nick the spinal cord. the patient now feels no pain or temperature sensations form that level of the body down. most likely, the _____ was damaged.
flexor withdrawl reflex
a quick contraction of flexor muscles to remove a limb from harm. followed by crossed extension reflex
reciprocal inhibition MC
a stretch reflex requires the action of ____ to prevent an antagonist muscle from interfering with the agonist
muscle spindle
a type of sense organ that has enlongated fibrous capsules with intrafusal fibers that detect stretch and extrafusal fibers that flex.
the cauda equina
below L2, the vertebral canal is occupied by a bundle of spinal nerve roots called
terminal filum
beyond medullary cone as pia. at S2 fuses with dura to form coccygeal ligament and anchors to spinal cord to coccyx 1.
cauda equina
bundle of nerve roots that innervates legs and pelvic organs
medullary cone
end of spinal cord
spaces of spinal cord
epidural, subarachnoid (CSF), subdural
denticulate ligaments
extensions of pia that anchor to spinal cord against side to side movement
reflex integrating center
found in spinal cord gray matter. type of neural integration of how strong the reflex will be.
gracile, cuneate
g- below T6, cuneate- above T6 body movement, proprioception, fine touch A
spinoreticular
pain from tissue injury A
spinothalamic
pain, temperature A
corticospinal
precise limb movement D
spinocerebellar
proprioception, goes to cerebellum. ipsilateral tract A
somatic reflexes
quick, involuntary, stereotyped reactions of glands or muscles to a stimuli
tectospinal
reflex turning head to sight/sounds D
gray matter
soma and dendrites. synaptic transmission. neural integration
decussate
to cross