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Brain Stem Overview: Midbrain, Pons & Medulla Figure 9-9d: ANATOMY SUMMARY: The Brain

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Page 1: Brain Stem Overview: Midbrain, Pons & Medulla · Pons & Medulla. Cranial Nerves Table 9-1: The Cranial Nerves •Cervical • Thoracic • Lumbar •Sacral Spinal Cord Regions Figure

Brain Stem Overview: Midbrain,Pons & Medulla

Figure 9-9d: ANATOMY SUMMARY: The Brain

Page 2: Brain Stem Overview: Midbrain, Pons & Medulla · Pons & Medulla. Cranial Nerves Table 9-1: The Cranial Nerves •Cervical • Thoracic • Lumbar •Sacral Spinal Cord Regions Figure

• Many cranial nerves enter• Pyramids – nerve tracts crossover• Midbrain – eye movement control• Pons – breathing, signal relay• Medulla – involuntary functions

– Examples: Blood pressure, breathing, vomiting• Reticular formation:

– Network in brain stem– Arousal, sleep, pain, & muscle tone

Brain Stem Overview: Midbrain,Pons & Medulla

Page 3: Brain Stem Overview: Midbrain, Pons & Medulla · Pons & Medulla. Cranial Nerves Table 9-1: The Cranial Nerves •Cervical • Thoracic • Lumbar •Sacral Spinal Cord Regions Figure

Cranial Nerves

Table 9-1: The Cranial Nerves

Page 4: Brain Stem Overview: Midbrain, Pons & Medulla · Pons & Medulla. Cranial Nerves Table 9-1: The Cranial Nerves •Cervical • Thoracic • Lumbar •Sacral Spinal Cord Regions Figure

• Cervical• Thoracic• Lumbar• Sacral

Spinal Cord Regions

Figure 9-4a: ANATOMY SUMMARY: The Central Nervous System

Page 5: Brain Stem Overview: Midbrain, Pons & Medulla · Pons & Medulla. Cranial Nerves Table 9-1: The Cranial Nerves •Cervical • Thoracic • Lumbar •Sacral Spinal Cord Regions Figure

Cross-Sectional Anatomy of theSpinal Cord

• Anterior median fissure – separates anterior funiculi• Posterior median sulcus – divides posterior funiculi

Figure 12.30a

Page 6: Brain Stem Overview: Midbrain, Pons & Medulla · Pons & Medulla. Cranial Nerves Table 9-1: The Cranial Nerves •Cervical • Thoracic • Lumbar •Sacral Spinal Cord Regions Figure

Dermatomes

Figure 13.12

Page 7: Brain Stem Overview: Midbrain, Pons & Medulla · Pons & Medulla. Cranial Nerves Table 9-1: The Cranial Nerves •Cervical • Thoracic • Lumbar •Sacral Spinal Cord Regions Figure

Gray Matter: Organization

Figure 12.31

Page 8: Brain Stem Overview: Midbrain, Pons & Medulla · Pons & Medulla. Cranial Nerves Table 9-1: The Cranial Nerves •Cervical • Thoracic • Lumbar •Sacral Spinal Cord Regions Figure

Spinal Cord Organization

Figure 9-7: Specialization in the spinal cord

Page 9: Brain Stem Overview: Midbrain, Pons & Medulla · Pons & Medulla. Cranial Nerves Table 9-1: The Cranial Nerves •Cervical • Thoracic • Lumbar •Sacral Spinal Cord Regions Figure

White Matter: PathwayGeneralizations

Figure 12.32

Page 10: Brain Stem Overview: Midbrain, Pons & Medulla · Pons & Medulla. Cranial Nerves Table 9-1: The Cranial Nerves •Cervical • Thoracic • Lumbar •Sacral Spinal Cord Regions Figure

Nonspecific Ascending Pathway

• Nonspecificpathway forpain,temperature,and crudetouch withinthe lateralspinothalamictract

Figure 12.33b

Page 11: Brain Stem Overview: Midbrain, Pons & Medulla · Pons & Medulla. Cranial Nerves Table 9-1: The Cranial Nerves •Cervical • Thoracic • Lumbar •Sacral Spinal Cord Regions Figure

The Direct (Pyramidal) System

Figure 12.34a

Page 12: Brain Stem Overview: Midbrain, Pons & Medulla · Pons & Medulla. Cranial Nerves Table 9-1: The Cranial Nerves •Cervical • Thoracic • Lumbar •Sacral Spinal Cord Regions Figure

Spinal Cord Trauma:Transection

• Cross sectioning of the spinal cord at anylevel results in total motor and sensoryloss in regions inferior to the cut

• Paraplegia – transection between T1 andL1

• Quadriplegia – transection in the cervicalregion

Page 13: Brain Stem Overview: Midbrain, Pons & Medulla · Pons & Medulla. Cranial Nerves Table 9-1: The Cranial Nerves •Cervical • Thoracic • Lumbar •Sacral Spinal Cord Regions Figure

Reflexes

• A reflex is a rapid, predictable motorresponse to a stimulus

• Reflexes may:– Be inborn (intrinsic) or learned (acquired)– Involve only peripheral nerves and the spinal

cord– Involve higher brain centers as well

Page 14: Brain Stem Overview: Midbrain, Pons & Medulla · Pons & Medulla. Cranial Nerves Table 9-1: The Cranial Nerves •Cervical • Thoracic • Lumbar •Sacral Spinal Cord Regions Figure

Reflex Arc

• There are five components of a reflex arc– Receptor – site of stimulus– Sensory neuron – transmits the afferent

impulse to the CNS– Integration center – either monosynaptic or

polysynaptic region within the CNS– Motor neuron – conducts efferent impulses

from the integration center to an effector– Effector – muscle fiber or gland that responds

to the efferent impulse

Page 15: Brain Stem Overview: Midbrain, Pons & Medulla · Pons & Medulla. Cranial Nerves Table 9-1: The Cranial Nerves •Cervical • Thoracic • Lumbar •Sacral Spinal Cord Regions Figure

Reflex Arc

Figure 13.14

Receptor12 3

4

Sensory neuron Integrationcenter

5 EffectorMotor neuron

Stimulus

Skin

Spinal cord(in cross-section)

Interneuron

Page 16: Brain Stem Overview: Midbrain, Pons & Medulla · Pons & Medulla. Cranial Nerves Table 9-1: The Cranial Nerves •Cervical • Thoracic • Lumbar •Sacral Spinal Cord Regions Figure

• Vision• Hearing• Taste• Smell• Equilibrium

Special Senses – ExternalStimuli

Page 17: Brain Stem Overview: Midbrain, Pons & Medulla · Pons & Medulla. Cranial Nerves Table 9-1: The Cranial Nerves •Cervical • Thoracic • Lumbar •Sacral Spinal Cord Regions Figure

• Chemoreceptors• Mechanoreceptors• Photoreceptors• Thermoreceptors• Nociceptors

Sensory Receptor Types

Page 18: Brain Stem Overview: Midbrain, Pons & Medulla · Pons & Medulla. Cranial Nerves Table 9-1: The Cranial Nerves •Cervical • Thoracic • Lumbar •Sacral Spinal Cord Regions Figure

Sensory Receptor Types

Figure 10-1: Sensory receptors

Page 19: Brain Stem Overview: Midbrain, Pons & Medulla · Pons & Medulla. Cranial Nerves Table 9-1: The Cranial Nerves •Cervical • Thoracic • Lumbar •Sacral Spinal Cord Regions Figure

General Properties of SensorySystems

Figure 10-4: Sensory pathways

Page 20: Brain Stem Overview: Midbrain, Pons & Medulla · Pons & Medulla. Cranial Nerves Table 9-1: The Cranial Nerves •Cervical • Thoracic • Lumbar •Sacral Spinal Cord Regions Figure

• Mechanoreceptors• Free nerve endings• Pacinian corpuscles• Ruffini corpuscles• Merkel receptors• Meisaner's corpuscles• Barroreceptors

Touch (pressure)

Page 21: Brain Stem Overview: Midbrain, Pons & Medulla · Pons & Medulla. Cranial Nerves Table 9-1: The Cranial Nerves •Cervical • Thoracic • Lumbar •Sacral Spinal Cord Regions Figure

Touch (pressure)

Figure 10-11: Touch-pressure receptors

Page 22: Brain Stem Overview: Midbrain, Pons & Medulla · Pons & Medulla. Cranial Nerves Table 9-1: The Cranial Nerves •Cervical • Thoracic • Lumbar •Sacral Spinal Cord Regions Figure

• Touch• Temperature• Pain• Itch• Proprioception• Pathway

Somatic Senses – Internal Stimuli

Figure 10-10: The somatosensory cortex

Page 23: Brain Stem Overview: Midbrain, Pons & Medulla · Pons & Medulla. Cranial Nerves Table 9-1: The Cranial Nerves •Cervical • Thoracic • Lumbar •Sacral Spinal Cord Regions Figure

Somatic Pathways

Figure 10-9: Sensory pathways cross the body’s midline

Page 24: Brain Stem Overview: Midbrain, Pons & Medulla · Pons & Medulla. Cranial Nerves Table 9-1: The Cranial Nerves •Cervical • Thoracic • Lumbar •Sacral Spinal Cord Regions Figure

Sensory Modality

Figure 10-3: Two-point discrimination

Page 25: Brain Stem Overview: Midbrain, Pons & Medulla · Pons & Medulla. Cranial Nerves Table 9-1: The Cranial Nerves •Cervical • Thoracic • Lumbar •Sacral Spinal Cord Regions Figure

Sensory Modality

Figure 10-6: Lateral inhibition

Page 26: Brain Stem Overview: Midbrain, Pons & Medulla · Pons & Medulla. Cranial Nerves Table 9-1: The Cranial Nerves •Cervical • Thoracic • Lumbar •Sacral Spinal Cord Regions Figure

• Modality of the stimulus• location• Intensity• Duration• Tonic receptors• Phasic receptors• Adaptation

Stimulus Coding andProcessing

Page 27: Brain Stem Overview: Midbrain, Pons & Medulla · Pons & Medulla. Cranial Nerves Table 9-1: The Cranial Nerves •Cervical • Thoracic • Lumbar •Sacral Spinal Cord Regions Figure

Temperature

Figure 10-7: Sensory coding for stimulus intensity and duration

Page 28: Brain Stem Overview: Midbrain, Pons & Medulla · Pons & Medulla. Cranial Nerves Table 9-1: The Cranial Nerves •Cervical • Thoracic • Lumbar •Sacral Spinal Cord Regions Figure

Adaptation of SensoryReceptors

• Receptors responding to pressure, touch,and smell adapt quickly

• Receptors responding slowly includeMerkel’s discs, Ruffini’s corpuscles, andinteroceptors that respond to chemicallevels in the blood

• Pain receptors and proprioceptors do notexhibit adaptation