10 - Reticular Formation and Consciousness Flashcards
What is the definition of consciousness and arousal?
What does consciousness require?
Cortex and Reticular Formation connected by reciprocal excitatory projections, forming a positive feedback loop
Consciousness = cortex + reticular formation
What is the reticular formation and how does it maintain consciousness?
- Population of specialised interneurones in the brainstem.
- Reticular activating system devoted to arousal
- Inputs: sensory system (e.g hot room) and cortex (e.g own thoughts)
- Outputs: thalamus (glutamate), hypothalamus (histamine), basal forebrain nuclei (Ach), spinal cord (regulates muscle tone)
Why do antihistamines and anticholinergics have drowsiness as a side effect?
They block the excitatory neurotransmitters being released from the hypothalamus and the basal forebrain nuclei so less stimulation of consciousness/awakefulness
What is the basis of the Glasgow Coma Scale that is used to assess the level of consciousness?
- Best is 15, worst is 3
- Eye opening spontaneously would means normal cortical and brainstem function
- Eye opening in response to speech would mean lower level of cortical function but brainstem still good
- Eye opening to pain would mean cortex damaged as pain is a reflex in brain stem
- No response suggest severe damage to brainstem
What is an electroencephalogram used for?
- Measures the combined activity of thousands of neurones in a given part of the cortex to a high temporal resolution but low spatial resolution
- MRI gives better spatial resolution but low temporal resolution
What is neural synchrony?
- Synchronous oscillations of membrane potentials in a network of neurons connected with electrical synapses (gap junctions).
- Considered to be the neural correlate of consciousness
- Happens in sleep (deprivation of sensory input) and epilepsy
What are the different stages of sleep?
- Usually cycle through sleep 6 times in a night
- Dream in REM
- As you go down the stages the EEG shows decreased frequency and increased amplitude as the neurones become synchronous
What do each of the scorings for the motor and verbal response of the GCS mean?
What would you see on the EEG in each stage of sleep?
What is the mechanism of non-REM sleep?
- Deactivation of reticular activating system (and hence cortex) + inhibition of the thalamus
- This deactivation is facilitated by removal of sensory inputs e.g tv off (fewer positive influences on positive feedback loop)
What is the mechanism of paradoxical REM sleep?
- Initiated by neurones in the pons
- Similar EEG to when awake with eyes open (beta waves), but difficult to rouse due to strong thalamic inhibition
- Decreased muscle tone due to glycinergic inhibition of lower motor neurones
- Eye movements and some other cranial nerve functions can be preserved (e.g. teeth grinding)
- Autonomic effects seen (e.g. penile erection, loss of thermoregulation)
- Essential for life – long term deprivation leads to death
What are the functions of sleep?
- Generally unknown
- Energy conservation / repair?
- Memory consolidation?
- Clearance of extracellular debris?
- ‘Resetting’ of the CNS?
What are some common sleep disorders?
What is the pathology behind the following disorders of consciousness:
- Brain death
- Coma
- PVS
- Locked in Syndrome
PVS is when a patient is in a vegetative state for more than 4 weeks, they are in a state of partial arousal