Cerebral Hemispheres Flashcards
Processing, interpretation, storage, retrieval, and neuronal patterning of language are neuronal intensive activities. Language is not only encephalized; it is also lateralized. What allowed this lateralization?
The development of the corpus callosum allowed lateralization of a specific function to reside in one hemisphere yet still share its information with the other side
What are the Brodmann area numbers for the sensory cortices and language areas: Primary somesthetic Primary auditory Primary visual Broca's speech area Wernicke's area
1-3 41-42 17 44-45 22
What are the Brodmann area numbers for Occipital eye field Frontal eye field Primary motor Premotor area
17
8
4
6, 8
Describe layers I-II of the cerebral cortex
Form the most superficial layers of cortex
Play important roles in association and higher cognitive functions such as memory, interpretation of sensory input, and certain discriminative functions
Describe layers III-IV of cerebral cortex
Receive most of the afferents into cortex
However, only 1% are thalamocortical fibers. Rest are corticocoritcal fibers
Describe layer V-VI of the cerebral cortex
Innermost layers of cortex
Source of efferents from cortex such as association fibers, commissural fibers, and projection fibers
Describe superior longitudinal fasciculus (SLF) or arcuate fasciculus
Interconnects frontal, parietal, and occiptal lobes
Critical link for language association areas
What do lesions of SLF or arcuate fasciculus result in?
Conduction aphasia
Patients are fluent with only minor word finding pauses and paraphasia, their ability to repeat words or sentences is severely impaired
Comprehension and reading ability is intact, but writing shows error in spelling, word selection, and syntax
What does the cingulum do?
Interconnects septal area, cingulate, and parahippocampal gyri to entorhianl cortex
What does the uncinate fasciculus do?
Interconnects base of association areas of frontal lobe to inferior temporal lobe
Connected to entorhinal cortex
What fibers are in the genu of the internal capsule? What does a lesion result in?
Corticobulbar fibers
Supranuclear facial palsy
What are fibers in the posterior limb of the internal capsule? What do lesions result in?
Corticospinal fibers -> contralateral spastaic hemiplegia Somesthetic fibers (thalamocortical) -> contralateral hemianesthesia
What fibers are in the retrolenticular region of the internal capsule? What do lesions result in?
Optic radiations
Contralateral homonymous hemianopia
What does an occlusion of the middle cerebral artery result in?
Sensory of motor deficits in contralateral upper limb and head
Describe the process of encephalization of sensory and motor systems
Sophisticated sensory and motor systems have become dependent upon development of cortical areas, which could discriminate, analyze, interpret, and respond to specific stimuli
This upward shifting of functions to the cortex is encephalization