Chapter 15: Brain and Cranial Nerves
premotor cortex
(somatomotor association area) coordinating learned, skilled motor activities
cranial nerves
- 12 pairs - serve head and neck (except vagus/ CN X) - sensory nerves - motor nerves - mixed nerves
O.O.O.T.T.A.F.V.G.V.A.H
- Oh - Once - One - Takes - The - Anatomy - Final - Very - Good - Vacations - Are - Had
cranial nerve VI
- abducens - sensory function: none - somatic motor function: 1 extrinsic eye muscle
cranial nerve XI
- accessory - sensory function: none - somatic motor function: 2 body muscles
pons
- anterior, middle portion of brainstem - sensory and motor tracts connecting brain to spinal cord - autonomic functions
pia mater
- areolar CT - form-fitting - inner, soft, tender layer
brainstem
- autonomic functions - mesencephalon - pons - medulla oblongata - connects cerebrum, diencephalon, and cerebellum to spinal cord
blood brain barrier
- blood and neurons separate - astrocytes and blood capillaries - helps prevent neuron exposure to harmful substances (drugs, wastes, fluctuating concentrations)
midbrain parts
- cerebral peduncles - superior/inferior colliculi
cerebellum
- comprises 10% of brain - part of metencephalon - responsible for coordinating and fine tuning movements, planning/executing movements, agility, balance and posture, adjusts/regulates movements (smoothness)
cerebrum
- comprises 85% of brain - responsible for human's conscious thought processes and complex intellectual functions - intelligence and reasoning - thought, memory, judgement - voluntary motor, visual, auditory
hypothalamus
- control autonomic nervous system - control endocrine system - regulate body temperature - emotional behavior (part of limbic system) - regulate hunger and thirst - regulation of sleep/wake cycle (circadian rhythms)
dura mater
- dense irregular CT - periosteal layer - meningeal layer (dural venous sinus) - hard outer layer
meninges
- dura mater - arachnoid mater - pia mater
cranial nerve VII
- facial - sensory function: taste from anterior 2/3 of tongue - somatic motor function: muscles of facial expression
cerebrum lobes
- frontal - parietal - occipital - temporal - insula
cranial nerve IX
- glossopharyngeal - sensory function: touch and taste posterior 1/3 of tongue - somatic motor function: one pharyngeal muscles
nervous tissue organization
- gray matter - whiter matter
cranial nerve XII
- hypoglossal - sensory function: none - somatic motor function: muscles of tongue
medulla oblongota
- inferior portion of brainstem - continuous with spinal cord inferiorly - sensory and motor tracts connecting brain to spinal cord - autonomic functions -decussation of the pyramids (motor fibers crossover = contralateralization)
ventricles
- lateral ventricles - third ventricle - fourth ventricle *cavities filled with CSF
cerebrum parts
- longitudinal fissure - gyri - sulci
mesencephalon develops into
- mesencephalon
rhombencephalon develops into
- metencephalon - myelencephalon - spinal cord
pons parts
- middle cerebella peduncles - autonomic respiratory centers - superior olivary complex
functional areas of cerebrum
- motor - sensory - association
white matter
- myelinated axons - tracts = bundles
gray matter
- neuron cell bodies, dendrites, unmyelinated axons - cortex = superficial layer - nuclei = close to surface or deep within brain
cranial nerve III
- oculomotor - sensory function: none - somatic motor function: 4 extrinsic eye muscles
cranial nerve I
- olfactory - sensory function: olfaction - somatic motor function: none
cranial nerve II
- optic - sensory function: vision - somatic motor function: none
epithalamus
- pineal gland - endocrine gland secretes melatonin - regulates circadian rhythm
association area parts
- premotor cortex - somatosensory association area - visual association area - auditory association area * no separate association areas for olfactory and gustatory
motor area parts
- primary motor cortex - frontal eye field - motor speech area (broca area)
sensory area parts
- primary somatosensory cortex - primary visual cortex - primary auditory cortex - primary olfactory cortex - primary gustatory cortex
choroid plexus
- produces CSF - ependymal cells and capillaries - in each ventricle - drains into arachnoid villi and into dural venous sinous
initial development of brain and spinal cord
- prosencephalon - mesencephalon - rhombencephalon
thalamus
- receives conscious senses (except olfaction) - filters and relays to primary cortices and association areas
medulla oblongota important autonomic centers
- regulate heart rate and strength - controls blood pressure (arteriole control) - respiratory rate (along with pons) - centers controlling coughing, sneezing, salivating, swallowing, gagging, vomiting, and hiccupping
forms of brain protection
- skull (bones) - meninges - cerebrospinal fluid - blood brain barrier
parts in midbrain only seen in cross sections
- substantia nigra - dopamine - motor control, emotion, pleasure, pain, compulsion - degeneration = parkinson's
midbrain
- superior portion of brainstem - sensory and motor tracts connecting brain to spinal cord - autonomic functions
prosencephalon develops into
- telencephalon - diencephalon
cranial nerve V
- trigeminal - sensory function: general sensory from surface of head and mouth, including touch from anterior 2/3 of tongue - somatic motor function: muscles of mastication and others
cranial nerve IV
- trochlear - sensory function: none - somatic motor function: 1 extrinsic eye muscle
cranial nerve X
- vagus - sensory function: visceral sensory most organs - somatic motor function: most pharyngeal and laryngeal muscles
cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) location and function
- ventricles and subarachnoid space - cushioning - buoyancy - transport of nutrients and waste
cranial nerve VIII
- vestibulocochlear - sensory function: hearing and equilibrium - somatic motor function: none
arachnoid mater
- web of collagen and elastic fibers (trabeculae) - subarachnoid space (cerebral spinal fluid) - middle layer
corpus callosum
a broad band of nerve fibers joining the two hemispheres of the brain.
inferior colliculi
auditory reflex centers
fourth ventricle
between brainstem and cerebellum
lateral ventricle
cerebrum
telencephalon becomes
cerebrum
projection tracts
cerebrum to the lower brain structures - decussate = contralateralization
visual association area
color, movement, form, facial recognition
association tracts
connect different regions of the cerebral cortex within the same hemisphere - arcuate fibers - longitudinal fasiculi
middle cerebellar peduncles
connects pons to cerebellum
motor areas
control voluntary motor functions
auditory association area
correlates with memories of sound, including music
cerebral peduncles
descending motor axons
third ventricle
diencephalon
sulci
grooves of brain
diencephalon becomes
hypothalamus, thalamus, epithalamus (including pineal gland)
primary gustatory cortex
insula, taste info from taste buds
gnostic area
integrates all sensory input into coherent whole by working with association areas within parietal, occipital, and temporal lobes to produce comprehensive understanding of current activity; composed of parts of parietal and temporal lobes
superior olivary complex
involved in sound localization
sensory areas
involved with conscious awareness of sensation
temporal lobe
language, emotion, smell, olfactory, auditory
commissural tracts
left and right hemispheres - corpus callosum
longitudinal fasiculi
long tracts connecting different lobes
myelencephalon becomes
medulla oblongata
insula
memory, gustatory (sense of taste)
mesencephalon becomes
midbrain (superior and inferior colliculi and cerebral aqueduct)
frontal eye field
muscles for eye movement, reading and coordinating binocular vision
motor speech area (broca area)
muscles used in speech, usually left front lobe only
primary visual cortex
occipital lobe, visual info from eye
frontal lobe
planning, judgement, decision making, impulse control, attention, personality, motor control
metencephalon becomes
pons, cerebellum
primary somatosensory cortex
postcentral gyrus, general sensory info
primary motor cortex
precentral gyrus, voluntary contralateral skeletal muscles
precentral gyrus
primary somatic motor cortex (frontal lobe)
postcentral cyrus
primary somatosensory cortex (parietal lobe)
association areas
process and interpret sensory input and/or coordinate motor output
wernicke area
recognizing, understanding spoken and written language; composed of parts of parietal and temporal lobes, works with other areas to speak, type and write
autonomic respiratory centers
regulate rate and depth of breathing
gyri
ridges of brain
parietal lobe
sensory information helps understand position in environment, general sensory
central sulcus
separates frontal and parietal lobes
longitudinal fissure
separates left and right hemispheres
arcuate fibers
short tracts within same lobe
spinal cord becomes
spinal cord
primary auditory cortex
temporal lobe, auditory info from inner ear
primary olfactory cortex
temporal lobe, olfactory info from nasal cavities
somatosensory association area
understanding of object producing the stimulus
occipital lobe
visual input, visual memories
superior colliculi
visual reflex centers