nervous system pathways Flashcards
types of pathways
ascending pathway (sensory) descending pathway (motor)
ascending pathway (sensory)
conducts impulses from general sense receptors into brain
ascending pathway has three successive neurons from receptor to cortex
first order neuron
second order neuron
third order neuron
first order neuron
receptor to spinal cord (PNS)
second order neuron
- interneuron, multipolar (CNS)
- cell body in dorsal horn of spinal cord of medulla (CNS)
- decussates (Crosses over) in spinal cord or medulla
third order neuron
- interneuron, multipolar (CNS)
- cell body in thalmus-impulses to postcentral gyrus (sensory cortex) (CNS)
axons of 1st or 2nd order neurons from ascending spinal tracts:
- posterior (dorsal) column pathway/tracts
- spinothalamic pathway/tracts
- spinocerebellar pathway/tracts
posterior (dorsal) column pathway/tracts
- sensations can be precisely located (touch)
- receptors = free nerve endings, Meissner’s etc
spinothalamic pathway/tracts
- non-specific, difficult to localize
- receptors = temperature, pain
spinocerebellar pathway/tracts
- ascending tracts from spinal cord to cerebellum
- receptors=proprioceptors
- 2nd order neuron directly to cerebellum (no 3rd order)
- no conscious perception
- no decussation
descending pathway (motor)
-conduct impulses from brain to effector
-
descending pathway has 2 neuron pathway :
upper motor neuron
lower motor neuron
upper motor neuron
(CNS)
- multipolar interneurons
- cell bodies in cortex or brainstem nuclei
lower motor neuron
cell bodies in ventral horn (CNS) and axons in PNS
axons of upper motor neurons from descending spinal tracts
corticospinal tracts
indirect tracts