9 - Higher Cortical Function Flashcards
What are the inputs and outputs to the cortex?
- Cerebral cortex made up of 6 layers
- Input: thalamus and other cortical areas e.g reticular formation
- Output: pyramidal cells and project to wide cell areas (projection fibres via UMNs, commisural fibres via corpus callosum, association fibres like arcuate fasiculus)
- Interneurones connect inputs and outputs
What is the function of the frontal lobes?
- Motor cortex
- Expression of speech (left hemisphere - Broca)
- Behavioural regulation (prefrontal cortex)
- Cognition
- Eye movements (frontal eye fields)
- Urinary Continence (paracentral lobules)
What are some features that a person may display with a frontal lobe lesion?
- Contralateral weakness
- Expressive/Broca’s dysphasia (left hemisphere)
- Impulsive disinhibited behaviour e.g aggressive, sexually inappropriate
- Difficult with complex problem solving (right hemisphere)
- Conjugate gaze issues/diplopia with other cortical features show frontal lobe lesion not nuclei/brainstem lesion
- Urinary incontinence
What is the function of the parietal lobes?
- Sensory cortex
- Understanding speech (left hemisphere - Wernicke’s)
- Body image (right hemisphere)
- Awareness of external environment
- Calculation and writing
- Superior optic radiation runs through here
What are some features that a person may have if they had a parietal lobe lesion?
- Contralateral anaesthesia in all modalities (convergence at cortex)
- Receptive Dysphasia/Wernicke’s Aphasia (left)
- Poor calculation ability
- Contralateral inferior homonymous quadrantanopia
What lobes are disinhibited when drinking alcohol?
- Frontal
- Cerebellum
What is the function of the temporal lobes?
- Hearing (primary auditory cortex on superior surface near Wernicke’s)
- Olfactory (primary olfactory cortex on infero-medial temporal lobe)
- Memory (hippocampus for declarative memories)
- Emotion (limbic system like hippocampus and amygdala)
- Inferior optic radiation
What are some features that a person may display if they have a temporal lobe lesion?
- Hearing effects like auditory hallucinations
- Changes in smell like olfactory hallucinations
- Amnesia
- Temporal lobe epilepsy (retriggering memories so like deja vu)
- Psychiatric disorders
- Contralateral superior homonymous quadrantanopia
What is the theory of cerebral dominance?
- A person does not depend equally on both hemispheres for a function e.g speech
- Right hemisphere tends to both halves of space but left only attends to right half of space (neglect - man and house on fire)
- Corpus callosum allows two hemispheres to communicate so we are the average of both
What is Alien Hand Syndrome?
- Destruction of the corpus callosum (supplies by ACA) so the two hemispheres cannot connect so one hand doesn’t know what the other is doing
- Destruction can also cause language issues
If a patient draws this what is the issue?
Left neglect due to damage with right hemisphere, often after a stroke
What is the language pathway in the brain?
- Left hemisphere
- Wernicke’s understands speech in parieto-temporal area near auditory cortex. Fluent receptive dysphasia if damaged
- Broca’s produces speech in inferolateral frontal lobe near mouth/pharynx motor area. Staccato speech/expressive dysphasia if damaged
- Joined by arcuate fasiculus and then Broca’s projects to motor cortex
What is the input and output to the language pathway in the following scenarios:
- Repeating a heard word
- Speaking a written word
- Speaking a thought
- All outputs from Broca to motor cortex
- Input: primary auditory cortex
- Input: primary visual cortex
- Input: all of cortex
What is Wernicke’s and Broca’s aphasia?
What can be the language issue if someone has a lesion to their arcuate fasiculus?
Inability to repeat a word said to them