Ascending Spinal Pathways Flashcards

1
Q

What are some of the general senses?

A
  • nociceptors (pain)
  • thermoreceptors (temp, change in temp)
  • mechanoreceptors (tactile and proprioception)
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2
Q

Where are the sensor receptors for the general senses found?

A
  • throughout the body, mainly in the skin
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3
Q

What are the special senses?

A
  • olfaction (smell: chemoreceptors)
  • gustation (taste: chemoreceptors)
  • vision (sight: photoreceptors)
  • hearing and equilibrium (balance: mechanoreceptors)
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4
Q

Where are the sensory receptors for the special senses found?

A
  • in the head
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5
Q

What are the function of the special senses, and via what nervous system does there information transmit?

A
  • they are specialised to respond to one kind of stimulus: act as interface between environment and body/brain
  • information only transmitted via CNS
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6
Q

What is the process involved in perceiving stimuli (from PNS to CNS)?

A
  • PNS receives sensations from external world and internal environment that have been detected by sensory receptors
  • PNS conducts the information to CNS as an AP for awareness
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7
Q

Define crude touch (pain, temp and itch) and discuss its purpose + features of its perception.

A
  • the ‘protective senses
  • ‘older system’
  • slow system - conveyed by small and less/un-myelinated axons
  • conveyed to brain via anterolateral (spinothalamic) pathways
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8
Q

Define fine touch and proprioception, and discuss features of their perception.

A
  • ‘explorative’ senses
  • ‘new system’
  • fast system (conveyed by large and highly myelinated axons)
  • conveyed to brain via dorsal-column (medial-lemniscus) pathway
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9
Q

How do spinal nerves receive sensory input?

A
  • outside the cell, via dorsal root ganglion (where the cell body is contained within the (pseudo) unipolar neuron
  • then through the dorsal root and dorsal rootlets, into dorsal horn where it there travels to the ventral motor horn
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10
Q

How do spinal nerves output motor information?

A
  • the cell body is contained in the motor neuron (inside grey matter of cell), information then travels through the ventral rootlets, roots and then back into the spinal nerve
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11
Q

How does the difference in diameter of an axon correlate to the speed of reaction?

A
  • thin = slow (protective receptors)
  • thick = fast (mechanoreceptors)
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12
Q

What are the functions of the enlargements on the spinal cord (cervical and lumbar), and what is a distinguishing difference between them?

A
  • cervical - control + supply of upper limb and shoulder
  • lumbar - control + supply of lower limb and pelvis (much more grey matter because of number of neurons required to innervate the number of muscles in the legs)
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13
Q

Where do dorsal rootlets enter the spinal cord, and where do ventral rootlets exit the spinal cord?

A

Dorsal rootlets enter at the dorsolateral sulcus
Ventral rootlets exit at the ventrolateral sulcus

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14
Q

What is the cauda equina?

A
  • the bundle of spinal nerve roots below the conus medullaris
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15
Q

What pathway is responsible for receiving proprioception and fine touch information?

A
  • the dorsal column-medial Lemniscus
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16
Q

What fascicles comprise the dorsal columns, and at what thoracic level are they both present?

A
  • gracile (contains fibres from lower body)
  • cuneate (contains fibres from upper body)
  • below T6, only gracile fascicle
  • from T6 and above, fibres also form cuneate fascicle
17
Q

Which fascicles forming the dorsal column are thicker, and why?

A
  • cuneate much thicker because more somatotopic representation in sensory cortex
18
Q

Where does the medial lemniscus a) originate from and b) decussate, and c) how does this distinguish the locations of the 1st and 2nd order neurons?

A

a) originates from dorsal column nuclei (gracile + cuneate nuclei)
b) decussates in the medulla to connect to contralateral thalamus (VPL - ventral posterior lateral nucleus)
c) - 1st order neurons - ipsilateral
- 2nd order neurons - axon cross midline (contralateral)

19
Q

Describe the pathway of the dorsal-column medial lemniscus once it terminates in the dorsal column nuclei.

A
  1. sensory decussation in lower brainstem (internal arcuate fibres)
  2. forms medial lemniscus
  3. to VPL
  4. to primary somatosensory cortex (via posterior limb of internal capsule)
20
Q

Outline the anterolateral pathway

A
  • dorsal root ganglion axons terminate in marginal zone, substantia gelatinosa
  • crossover ventral white commissure
  • ascend in lateral spinothalamic tract
  • then via VP thalamus to somatosensory cortex
21
Q

Crude touch sensation is received by which ascending pathway?

A
  • the anterolateral system (spinothalamic pathway)
22
Q

At what location do the two ascending systems come together?

A
  • pons (in brainstem)
23
Q

Summarise differences between the dorsal-column medial Lemniscus pathway and the anterolateral (spinothalamic) system, in regards to the order of their neurons.

A

Both originate from sensory organ
1st order neurons:
- DCML: in dorsal root ganglion
- Spino: in dorsal root ganglion
2nd order neurons (decussate to contralateral in both pathways)
- DCML: in dorsal column nuclei
- Spino: in spinal cord, posterior horn)
3rd order neurons:
- DCML: in thalamus
- Spino: in thalamus

24
Q

What 3 centres in the cortex does the spinothalamic pathway relay information, where it is further relayed to what 3 thalamic nuclei?

A

Cingulate gyrus -> medial dorsal nucleus
Insula -> ventral medial posterior nucleus
Primary somatosensory cortex -> ventral posterior lateral nucleus