Ascending pathways 2 Flashcards
what pattern do most conscious sensory tracts follow
what is the exception to this rule
there are three neurons
primary afferent (first order neuron) enter spinal cord- synapse to secondary neuron which projects to the thalamus to third neuron to somatosensory cortex. ALWAYS GO THROUGH THALAMUS
where they synapse is always slightly different
the exception is olfaction which does not go through the thalamus (bypasses it)
what does the thalamus do in regards to signals
it relays info, receive feedback and modulates signals
thalamus is linked to all parts of the cortex
can turn signals up or down
what do the cells of reticular nucleus in the thalamus do (GABA cells)
it receives excitatory afferents from both cortical and thalamic neurons and sends inhibitory projections
high activity go down collateral fibres to excite inhibitory neurons (turn down response)
what are the three principal ascending tract systems in the spinal cord
dorsal column medial lemniscus pathways
spinothalamic pathways
spinocerebellar pathways
why is the light touch pathway different
transmitted using two pathways,
therefore if lose this sensation you cant tell which pathway is affected
what is the dorsal column medial lemniscal pathway for
FOR MECHANICAL STIMULI
conscious proprioception
discriminative touch
vibration
pressure
describe the pathway of the dorsal column medial lemniscal pathway
ascend ipsolaterally up dorsal column (spinal cord)
synapses high up in spinal cord
crosses onto contralateral side at medulla and synapses at thalamus to synapse with third order neuron to somatosensory cortex
how do you diagnose where a lesion may be for dorsal column pathway
eg position sense will disappear for joints below the level of the lesion
the modaility will help differentiate the pathway
REMEMBER it is ipsolateral, so same side
what is fine tactile and proprioceptive info used for
determine the shape of an object without sight
determine the texture of an object
what is asteriognosis
describe inability to discriminate shape and size by touch and the inability to recognize objects by touch.
what is amorphosynthesis
it is a lesion of one of the somatosensory association cortex
cant recognise complex objects by feel on the opposite to the lesion
they still appreciate pain and temperature but cant locate with any certainty
what do lesions of gracile fasciculus cause
gait ataxia
what do lesions in the cervical cord cause
upper extremity ataxia
what is the stamp and stick gait
look at floor, stamp foot to reinforce proprioception
usually minimise sensory ataxia as compensating
broad stance
describe the spinothalamic pathway
synapse quickly in the dorsal horn and cross immediately, ascending in the lateral or anterior spinothalamic tract
synapse at the thalamus then projects to sensory cortex