EXAM 4 BIO 201
Explain the consequences of a lack of blood flow to the brain
10-second may cause loss of consciousness 1- to 2-minute causes impairment of neural function 4 minutes without blood causes irreversible brain damage
Medulla Oblongata
Begins at foramen magnum of the skull 3 cm extension of spinal cord Ascending and descending nerve tracts Nuclei of sensory and motor Cranial Ns (IX, X, XI, XII)
Compare blood-CSF barrier and blood-brain barrier
Blood brain barrier blood capillaries throughout the brain tissue tight junctions between endothelial cells astrocytes reach out and contact capillaries with their perivascular feet Blood CSF barrier capillaries of the choroid plexus ependymal cells have tight junctions
Pons
Bulge in the brainstem Rostral to the medulla Ascending sensory tracts Descending motor tracts Pathways in & out of cerebellum Cranial nerves V, VI, VII, and VIII
List the components of the forebrain
Cerebrum Diencephalon Hypothalamus Epithalamus
Describe CSF and how it is produced
Clear liquid fills ventricles and canals & bathes its external surface (in subarachnoid space) Brain produces & absorbs about 500 ml/day filtration of blood through choroid plexus
• Define somesthetic sensation
Comes from receptors widely distributed throughout the body touch, pain, pressure, stretch, movement, heat, cold Somatosensory area is postcental
Brain Lesion of Parietal Lobe
Contralateral neglect syndrome unaware of objects or limbs on one side of body
Describe the sensory homunculus
Demonstrates that the area of the cortex dedicated to the sensations of various body parts is proportional to how sensitive that part of the body is
List the components of the brainstem
Diencephalon* Midbrain Pons Medulla oblongata
List and describe the meninges of the brain, as well as all of the layers and spaces that are associated
Dura mater -- outermost, tough membrane outer periosteal layer against bone inner meningeal layer Subdural layer sinuses draining blood from brain supportive structures formed by dura mater falx cerebri, falx cerebelli and tentorium cerebelli Arachnoid mater is spider web filamentous layer Pia mater is a thin vascular layer adherent to contours of brain
Compare and contrast gray and white matter
Gray Matter neuron cell bodies, dendrites, and synapses forms cortex over cerebrum and cerebellum forms nuclei deep within brain White matter bundles of axons forms tracts that connect parts of brain
Describe the location and functions of the reticular formation
Gray matter, pons, midbrain and medulla Regulate balance and posture relays information from eyes and ears to cerebellum Regulates sleep and conscious attention Includes cardiac and vasomotor centers pain modulation Controlling pain
Define habituation
Habituation - ignoring repetitive, inconsequential stimuli injury leads to irreversible coma
Define Language
Includes reading, writing, speaking & understanding words
Describe meningitis - list the signs and symptoms and describe how it is diagnosed
Inflammation of the meninges Bacterial and virus invasion of the CNS by way of the nose and throat Signs include high fever, stiff neck, drowsiness and intense headache and may progress to coma Diagnose by examining the CSF lumbar puncture (spinal tap)
Cerebral Lateralization
Left hemisphere is categorical hemisphere specialized for spoken & written language, sequential & analytical reasoning (math & science), analyze data linearly Right hemisphere is representational hemisphere perceives information more holistically, perception of spatial relationships, pattern, comparison of special senses, imagination & insight, music and artistic skill
Describe the limbic system
Loop of cortical structures surrounding deep brain amygdala, hippocampus, fornix & cingulate gyrus
Describe the basal nuclei and its functions
Masses of gray matter deep to cerebral cortex Receive input from substantia nigra & motor cortex motor control & inhibition of tremors
List the components of the hindbrain
Medulla Oblongata Pons Cerebellum
Cognition
Mental processes such as awareness, perception, thinking, knowledge and memory association areas = 75% of brain integration of sensory and motor information occurs
Cerebellum
Monitors muscle contractions Aids in motor coordination Comparing textures without looking at them Spatial perception and comprehension of different views of three-dimensional objects belonging to the same object Timekeeping center Predicting movement of objects Helps predict how much the eyes must move in order to compensate for head movements and remain fixed on an object Hearing - distinguish pitch and similar sounding words Planning and scheduling tasks Lesions may result in emotional overreactions and trouble with impulse control many children with ADHD have small cerebellums
Diencephalon: Thalamus
Oval mass of gray matter protrudes into lateral ventricle and 3rd ventricle Receives nearly all sensory information on its way to cerebral cortex Relays signals from cerebellum to motor cortex Emotional and memory functions - limbic system
Epithalamus (Pineal Gland)
Pineal gland - secretes melatonin & plays a role in the production of seratonin Habenula -connects limbic system to midbrain
Emotion regions of the brain
Prefrontal cortex controls how emotions are expressed (seat of judgement) Emotions form in hypothalamus & amygdala
REM Sleep
REM sleep occurs about 5 times a night rapid eye movements under the eyelids vital signs increase EEG resembles awake person dreams and penile erections occur may help sort & strengthen information from memory
Explain what happens in our brain when we are sleeping
Restorative effect brain glycogen levels increase memories strengthened synaptic connections reinforced or eliminated
Define rostral, caudal, cortex, nuclei and tracts
Rostral - toward the nose Caudal - toward the tail Cortex = surface layer of gray matter Nuclei = deeper masses of gray matter Tracts = bundles of axons (white matter
Midbrain
Short segment of brainstem - connects hindbrain to forebrain Contains motor nuclei of 2 cranial nerves for eye movements CN III (oculomotor) and CN IV (trochlear)
Cerebral peduncles
Substantia nigra- dark gray nucleus pigmented with melanin Motor center that relays inhibitory signals to thalamus and basal nuclei preventing unwanted body movement Degeneration of neurons = tremors of Parkinson disease Cerebral crus - connect the cerebrum to the pons Carries corticospinal tracts Tegmentum Dominated by the red nucleus - high density of blood vessels Connections go to and from cerebellum Collaborates with cerebellum for fine motor control
Insula - internal lobe
Understanding spoken and written language, taste and sensory info from visceral receptors
suprachiasmatic nucleus
acts as biological clock to set our circadian rhythym Controlled by hypothalamus, reticular formation, thalamus, and cerebral cortex
Brain Lesion of Temporal Lobe
agnosia - inability to recognize objects prosopagnosia - inability to recognize faces
Brain Waves
alpha: awake & resting with eyes closed beta: eyes open performing mental tasks theta: emotional stress delta: deep sleep
Contrast anterograde and retrograde amnesia
anterograde amnesia -- can not store new data retrograde amnesia -- can not remember old data
Temporal Lobe
areas for hearing, smell, learning, memory, emotional behavior
Explain the function of CSF
buoyancy - the actual mass of the human brain is ~1400g, however the net weight of the brain suspended in CSF = ~25g protection - cushions from hitting inside of skull Chemical stability - rinses away wastes
Compare the volume of the cerebrum and cerebellum
cerebrum is 83% of brain volume cerebellum contains 50% of the neurons
Concussion
damage to brain from blow to head loss of consciousness, visual/equilibrium disturbances
aprosodia
flatless speech
Lesion to Wernicke's
fluent aphasia speech normal & excessive, but makes little sense
Broca's area
generates motor program for larynx, tongue, cheeks & lips
Diencephalon: Hypothalamus
hormone secretion Autonomic NS control thermoregulation food and water intake hunger and satiety sleep and circadian rhythms memory mammillary bodies emotional behavior
Visual association area (occipital lobe)
identify the things we see faces are recognized in temporal lobe
Amygdala
important in emotions
Hippocampus
important in memory
Encephalitis
inflammation of brain due to infection neuronal degeneration, necrosis delirium, seizures, death
Define association areas
interpret sensory information
List the ventricles and canals of the brain
lateral ventricles - inside cerebral hemispheres third ventricle - a single vertical space under corpus callosum cerebral aqueduct - runs through midbrain fourth ventricle - small chamber between pons & cerebellum and is caudal central canal - runs down through spinal cord
Cerebral palsy
muscular incoordination damage to brain during fetal development
Lesion to Broca's
nonfluent aphasia slow speech, difficulty in choosing words entire vocabulary may be 2 to 3 words
Wernicke's area
permits recognition of spoken & written language & communication
Somesthetic association area (parietal lobe)
position of limbs, location of touch or pain, and shape, weight & texture of an object
Brian Lesion of Frontal Lobe
problems with personality inability to plan and execute appropriate behavior
Motor homunculus
proportional to number of muscle motor units in a region (fine control)
Parietal
receives and integrates sensory information
Auditory association area
remember the name of a piece of music or identify a person by his voice
Migraine Headache
severe recurring headaches accompanied by nausea, vomiting, dizziness, light aversion
Special senses
smell, taste, vision, hearing & equilibrium
Anomic aphasia
speech & understanding are normal but text & pictures make no sense
List the stages of sleep
stage 1 is drifting sensation would claim was not sleeping stage 2 still easily aroused stage 3 vital signs change BP, pulse & breathing rates drop reached in 20 minutes stage 4 is deep sleep -- difficult to arouse
Describe the brain barrier system
strictly regulates what substances can get from the bloodstream into the tissue fluid of the brain
Epilepsy
sudden massive discharge of neurons = seizures trauma, tumors, drugs, infections, congenital brain malformation
Locations of special senses
taste is lower end of postcentral gyrus smell is medial temporal lobe & inferior frontal lobe vision is occipital lobe Hearing is superior temporal lobe equilibrium is mainly the cerebellum, but to unknown areas of cerebral cortex via the thalamus
Schizophrenia
thought disorder involving delusions
Occipital Lobe
visual center
Frontal Lobe
voluntary motor functions planning, mood, smell and social judgement