NEURO LESIONS IN SPECIFIC PARTS OF THE CEREBRUM Flashcards

1
Q

There are how many brodmann areas?

A

47

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2
Q

surface area of the cortex

A

Unfolded, it has a surface extent of about 4,000 cm2

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3
Q

the allocortex (“other cortex”), is composed of?

A

hippocampus and olfactory cortex

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4
Q

what are the layers of the cortex from the pial to subcortical

A
the molecular (or plexiform), 
external granular, 
external pyramidal, 
internal granular, 
ganglionic (or internal
pyramidal), and 
multiform (or fusiform) layers
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5
Q

cell types of the cortex

A

types-relatively large
pyramidal cells and smaller, more numerous rounded
(granular) cells-predominate in the neocortex

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6
Q

2 types of neocortex

A

(1) the homol:tjpical cortex, in which the
six-layered arrangement is readily discerned, and (2) the
heterotypical cortex, in which the layers are less distinct.

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7
Q

The precentral cortex
(Brodmann areas 4 and 6, mainly motor region) is dominated by______________, especially
in layer V

A

pyramidal rather than granular cells

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8
Q

the primary sensory cortices, postcentral
gyrus (areas 3, 1, 2), banks of the calcarine sulcus
(area 1 7), and the transverse gyri of Heschl (areas 41 and
42), where layers II and IV are strongly developed for the
receipt of afferent impulses, has been termed __________because of the marked predominance of granular cells

A

granular cortex

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9
Q

Neurons of ___________
send axons to subcortical structures and the spinal cord.
Neurons of layer Vl project mainly to the_______

A

layer V (projection efferents)

thalamus

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10
Q

Another group of disorders known as __________depend not merely on involvement of certain
cortical regions but more specifically on the interruption
of inter- and intrahemispheric fiber tracts

A

disconnection

Syndromes

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11
Q

Area _______of the dominant hemisphere
(Broca area) and the contiguous part of ___________ are “centers” of motor speech and related functions of the lips, tongue, larynx, and pharynx

A

44

area 4

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12
Q

The ________ and anterior parts of the _________, which are the frontal components of the limbic system, take part in the control of respiration, blood pressure, peristalsis, and other autonomic function

A

medial-orbital gyri

cingulate and insular gyri

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13
Q

The ___________ and more
specifically, pyramidal cells of layer V of the pre- and
postcentral convolutions provide most of the cerebral
efferent motor system that forms the pyramidal, or corticospinal, tract

A

frontal agranular cortex (areas 4 and 6)

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14
Q

A tract, the ________, connects
the frontal with the occipital lobe and the ____________connects the orbital part of the frontal lobe with the temporal lobe

A

fronto-occipital fasciculus

uncinate bundle

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15
Q

With regard to behavior and the frontal lobe, the
___________ is in a general sense committed
to the planning, initiation, monitoring, and execution
of all cerebral activity

A

anterior half of the brain

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16
Q

lesions of the frontal lobes give rise

to:

A

a loss of drive, impairment of consecutive planning,
an inability to maintain serial relationships of events,
and to shift easily from one mental activity to another

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17
Q

lesions of these parts cause mutism, contralateral motor

neglect, and impairment of bibrachial coordination

A

Ablation of the right or left supplementan; motor areas
(the parts of area 6 that lie on the medial surfaces of the
cerebral hemispheres)

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18
Q

an important function of the

supplementary motor area is the ________________,

A

ordering of motor tasks

or the recall of memorized motor sequences

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19
Q

_________________________ the dominant
hemisphere result in a reduction or loss of motor
speech, and of agraphia, and apraxia of the face, lips, and
tongue,

A

Destruction of the Broca convolution (areas 44 and

45) and the adjacent insular and motor cortex of

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20
Q

they signify a loss of the
ability to use the lower limbs in the act of walking that
cannot be explained by weakness, loss of sensation, or
ataxia from lesions of frontal lobe

A

gait apraxia

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21
Q

lesions resulting in incontinence

A

Right- or left-sided lesions involving the posterior

part of the superior frontal gyrus, the anterior cingulate gyrus, and the intervening white matter

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22
Q

speech problems associated with frontal lobe disease

A

laconic speech,
lack of spontaneity of speech, telegrammatic speech
(agrammatism), loss of fluency, perseveration of speech, a
tendency to whisper instead of speaking aloud, and dysarthria

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23
Q

lesions that lead to abulia

A

ventromedial

frontal regions or frontal-diencephalic connections

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24
Q

Disinhibition occurs largely

with_________

A

dorsolateral frontal lesions.

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25
These patients, otherwise displaying mental clarity and despite negative personal and social consequences, collect massive amounts of useless items such as newspapers, junk mail, catalogs, food, clothing, and appliances, often encompassing several categories
Pathological collecting behavior (hoarding)
26
lesions associating with hoarding behavior
medial frontal lobe damage, including the cingulate | gyri
27
In general, the greatest cognitive-intellectual deficits | relate to lesions in the __________
dorsolateral parts of the prefrontal lobes
28
greatest personality, mood, and behavioral changes stem from lesions of the ____________
medialorbital | parts,
29
associations: left dorsal frontal lesions and _______________, and right side orbitofrontal lesions, with___________
anger with hostility anxiety and depression
30
Psych tests to check for frontal lobe dysfunction
``` They include the Wisconsin card-sorting test, the Stroop color-naming test, sequencing of pictures, "trail making test" "go-no-go" test threestep hand posture test of Luria ```
31
abnormaility in Luria test results in this:
"kinetic limb apraxia
32
what is "kinetic limb apraxia
the natural kinetic "melody," or smoothness of transition from one hand position to the next is disrupted and there is a tendency to perseverate
33
Effects of unilateral frontal disease, either left or right
A. Contralateral spastic hemiplegia B. Contralateral gaze paresis C. Apathy and loss of initiative or its opposite, slight elevation of mood, increased talkativeness, tendency to joke inappropriately (witzelsucht), lack of tact, difficulty in adaptation D. If entirely prefrontal, no hemiplegia; but grasp and suck reflexes or instinctive grasping may be released E. Anosmia with involvement of orbital parts
34
Effects of right frontal disease
A. Left hemiplegia | B. Changes as in I.B, C, and D
35
Effects of left frontal disease
Right hemiplegia B. Broca's aphasia with agraphia, with or without apraxia of the lips and tongue (see Chap. 23) C. Sympathetic apraxia of left hand (see
36
Effects of bifrontal disease
A. Bilateral hemiparesis B. Spastic bulbar (pseudobulbar) palsy C. If prefrontal, abulia or akinetic mutism, lack of ability to sustain attention and solve complex problems, rigidity of thinking, bland affect, social ineptitude, behavioral disinhibition, inability to anticipate, labile mood, and varying combinations of grasping, sucking, obligate imitative movements, utilization behavior D. Decomposition of gait and sphincter incontinence
37
The ________________ supplies blood to the convexity of the temporal lobe, and the _______________________supplies the medial and inferior aspects, including the hippocampus
inferior branch of the middle cerebral artery temporal branch of the posterior cerebral artery
38
The ______________ an integral part of the auditory cortex, lies immediately posterior to the Heschl convolutions, on the superior surface of the temporal lobe
planum temporale (area 22),
39
The middle and inferior temporal gyri (areas 2 1 and 37) receive a massive contingent o f fibers from the___________and the______________
striate cortex (area 1 7) ``` parastriate visual association areas (areas 18 and 1 9 ) . ```
40
The superior part of the dominant temporal lobe is | concerned with the ___________
acoustic or receptive aspects of language
41
The most important functions of the hippocampus and other structures of the hippocampal formation (dentate gyrus, subiculum, entorhinal cortex, and parahippocampal gyrus) are___________
learning and memory
42
The temporal | lobes are connected to one another through the _____ and _______
anterior | commissure and middle part of the corpus callosum
43
Physiologically, ________ is an integrator of "sensations, emotions, and behavior" in so far as it relates the organism's sensory experiences to emotional meaning thought it's proximity to the limbic system
the temporal lobe
44
lesions of the white matter of the central and posterior parts of the temporal lobe characteristically involve the lower arching fibers of the _______
``` geniculocalcarine pathway (Meyer loop). ```
45
In ______________, auditory sensations cannot be distinguished from one another. Such varied sounds as the tinkling of a bell, the rustling of paper, running water, and a siren all sound alike
agnosia for sounds
46
Also, it was observed that lesions of the right auditory cortex impaired the recognition of __________ (the temporal sequence of pitches) and of ____________ (the sounding of simultaneous pitches)
melody harmony
47
it appears that the left inferior | frontal region is activated by tasks that involve the ____________
identification | of familiar music
48
nondominant hemisphere is important for the _____________________ but that the naming of musical scores and all the semantic (writing and reading) aspects of music require the integrity of the ________________
recognition of harmony and melody (in the absence of words), dominant temporal and probably the frontal lobes as wel
49
___________i s a failure o f the left temporal lobe function in decoding the acoustic signals of speech and converting them into understandable words
word deafness
50
It should also be noted that complex but unformed auditory hallucinations (e.g., the sound of an orchestra tuning up), as well as entire strains of music and singing, also occur, inexplicably, with lesions that appear to be restricted to the ______
pons (pontine auditory hallucinosis,
51
Stimulation of this cortical area for the treatment of intractable tinnitus has elicited ________
autoscopy
52
What is autoscopy
seeing one's self from an external | perspective
53
The central areas identified physiologically with olfaction are the ____________________, i.e., the areas that mediate numerous visceral functions
posterior orbitofrontal, subcallosal, anterior temporal, | and insular cortices
54
Stimulation of the posterior parts of the___________________of fully conscious epileptic patients can arouse complex memories and visual and auditory images, some with strong emotional content
first and second temporal convolutions
55
``` The loss of certain visual integrative abilities, particularly face recognition (prosopagnosia), is usually assigned to lesions of the____________ ```
inferior occipital lobes
56
difference in dominant vs non-dominant temporal lobectomy
With the former, there is dysnomia and impairment in the learning of material presented through the auditory sense; with the latter, there is impairment in the learning of visually presented material
57
Effects of unilateral disease of the dominant temporal | lobe
A. Homonymous contralateral upper quadrantanopia B. Wernicke's aphasia (word deafness; auditory verbal agnosia) C. Dysnomia or amnesic aphasia D. Amusia (some types) E. Visual agnosia F. Occasionally, amnesic (Korsakoff ) syndrome
58
Effects of unilateral disease of the nondominant temporal | lobe
A. Homonymous upper quadrantanopia B. Inability to judge spatial relationships in some cases C. Impairment in tests of visual! y presented nonverbal material D. Agnosia for sounds and some qualities of music
59
Effects of disease of either temporal lobe
A. Auditory, visual, olfactory, and gustatory hallucinations B. "Dreamy" states with seizure (focal temporal lobe seizure) C. Emotional and behavioral changes D. Delirium-confusional states (usually nondominant
60
Effects of bilateral temporal lobe disease
A. Korsakoff amnesic defect (hippocampal formations) B. Apathy and placidity C. Kliiver-Bucy syndrome: compulsion to attend to all visual stimuli, hyperorality, hypersexuality, blunted emotional reactivity; the full syndrome is rarely seen in humans
61
This sulcus runs anteroposteriorly from the middle of the posterior central sulcus and separates the mass of the parietal lobe into superior and inferior lobules
interparietal | sulcus
62
The inferior parietal lobule is composed of the ______________(Brodmann area 40) and the ____________(area 39).
supramarginal gyrus angular gyrus
63
The architecture of the postcentral convolution is typical of all primary receptive areas________________
(homotypical granular cortex).
64
the anterior parietal cortex contains the mechanisms for__________. ______, are organized in the more posterior, secondary sensory areas
tactile percepts Discriminative tactile functions
65
The discomfort involved the entire half of the body or | matched the region of cortical hypesthesia; in a few cases, the symptoms were paroxysmal
pseudothalamic pain st;ndrome
66
With _______________ there is sometimes an associated mild hemiparesis, as this portion of the parietal lobe contributes a considerable number of fibers to the corticospinal tract
anterior parietal lobe lesions,
67
In instances of cortical sensory disturbance, the outstretched hand may display small random "searching" movements of the fingers that simulate playing a piano ; these are exaggerated when the eyes are closed. What is this phenomenon called?
(pseudoathetosis)
68
a patient with a dense hemiplegia, usually of the left side, may be indifferent to a paralysis, or is entirely unaware of it
Anosognosia and hemispatial neglect (AntonBabinski | syndrome)
69
On the other extreme of the conceptual negation of paralysis are instances of self-mutilation of the paralyzed limb __________
(apotemnophilia).
70
Another common group of parietal symptoms consists of neglect of one side of the body in dressing and grooming, recognition only on the intact side of bilaterally and simultaneously presented stimuli_________
(sensory | extinction)
71
Conventional treatments for hemispatial neglect use _________ and training in visual exploration of the left side.
prismatic glasses
72
what is the use of the mirror in the treatment of hemispatial neglect
With a mirror in the right parasagittal plane, the patient observes the mirror image of their neglected hand and space and is induced to use that side more naturally
73
When defects of apraxia are intertwined with agnosic defects, the term ____________ seems appropriate.
apractognosia
74
A special type of visuospatial disorder, separable from neglect but also associated with lesions of the nondominant parietal lobe, is reflected in the patient's inability to reproduce geometric figures __________
(constructional apraxia)
75
Lesions of Gerstmann
The lesion is in the left inferior parietal lobule (below the interparietal sulcus), particularly involving the angular gyrus or subjacent white matter of the left hemisphere.
76
Occasionally, severe left-sided visual neglect results from a lesion in the _________ Visual neglect can also occur after focal lesions in the __________
right angular gyrus posterior medial temporal lobe
77
lesions of what side of the parietal lobe?
R
78
Effects of unilateral disease of the parietal lobe, right | or left
A. Corticosensory syndrome and sensory extinction (or total hemianesthesia with large acute lesions of white matter) B. Mild hemiparesis or poverty of movement (variable), poverty of movement, hemiataxia (seen only occasionally) C. Homonymous hemianopia or inferior quadrantanopia (incongruent or congruent) or visual inattention D. Abolition of optokinetic nystagmus with target moving toward side of the lesion E. Neglect of the opposite side of external space (more prominent with lesions of the right parietal lobe; see later)
79
``` Effects of unilateral disease of the dominant (left) parietal lobe (in right-handed and most left-handed patients); additional phenomena include ```
A. Disorders of language (especially alexia) B. Gerstmann syndrome (dysgraphia, dyscalculia, finger agnosia, right-left confusion) C. Tactile agnosia (bimanual astereognosis) D. Bilateral ideomotor and ideational apraxia
80
Effects of unilateral disease of the nondominant | (right) parietal lobe
A. Visuospatial disorders B. Topographic memory loss C. Anosognosia, dressing, and constructional apraxias (these disorders may occur with lesions of either hemisphere but are observed more frequently and are of greater severity with lesions of the nondominant one) D. Confusion E. Tendency to keep the eyes closed, resist lid opening, and blepharospasm
81
Effects of bilateral disease of the parietal lobes
``` A. Balint syndrome: visual-spatial imperception (simultagnosia), optic apraxia (difficulty directing gaze), and optic ataxia (difficulty reaching for objects) ```
82
The large calcarine fissure courses in an anteroposterior direction from the pole of the occipital lobe to the _________
splenium of the corpus callosum
83
Area 17 is a typical homotypical cortex but is unique in that its fourth receptive layer is divided into two granular cell laminae by a greatly thickened band of myelinated fibers,__________
the external band | of Baillarger.
84
This stripe, also called the line or band of Gennari, is grossly visible and has given this area its name, __________
striate cortex
85
The largest part of area 17 is the terminus of the _________ that arrive via the lateral geniculate
retinal macular fibers
86
The occipital lobes are supplied almost exclusively by the posterior cerebral arteries and their branches, either directly in most individuals or through an embryologically persistent branch of the ____________ ("fetal" posterior cerebral artery)
internal carotid arteries
87
monkeys with bilateral lesions in the temporal visual zones lose the ability to _______; with posterior parietal lesions, there is loss of ability ________
identify objects to locate objects.
88
EEG findings for cortical blindness
With rare exceptions, no cortical potentials can be evoked in the occipital lobes by light flashes or pattern changes (visual evoked response), and the alpha rhythm is lost in the electroencephalogram (
89
natural hx for recovery from cortical blindness
from cortical blindness through visual agnosia and partially impaired perceptual function to recovery.
90
Vis u a l A n o so g n os i a (Anto n Syn d ro m e ) lesions
The lesions in cases of negation of blindness extend beyond the striate cortex to involve the visual association areas.
91
What comprises Vis u a l I l l u s i o n s ( M eta m o rp h o ps i a s )
deformation of the image, change in size, illusion of movement, or a combination of all thr􀃈ee
92
The illusion of tilting of the environment or upside-down vision is known to occur with __________, but occurs more often with abnormalities of the _________
parietooccipital lesions vestibular system.
93
It is usually the case that the lesions responsible for visual hallucinations are situated in the _______________ and that elementary hallucinations have their origin in the________ and complex ones in the _______
occipital lobe or posterior part of the temporal lobe occipital cortex, temporal cortex
94
distinct processes of visual recognition
the construction of a perceptual representation from vision (perception) and the mapping of this perceptual representation onto stored percepts or engrams of the object's functions and associations (apperception)
95
In pts with prosopagnosia, how do they identify the person
In identifying persons, the patient depends on other data, such as the presence and type of glasses or moustache, the type of gait, or sound of the voice.
96
The patient may be able to describe a familiar environment from memory and locate it on a map, but he experiences no sense of familiarity and gets lost when faced with the actual landscape. What is this?
environmental agnosia.
97
The common form of retinal color blindness is congenital and is readily tested by the use of ________
Ishihara plates
98
___________ is frequently associated with visual field defects and with prosopagnosia
Achromatopsia
99
no difficulty with color perception (i.e., they can match seen colors), but they cannot reliably name them or point out colors in response to their names
color anomia
100
Occipital lobe lesions: Effects of unilateral disease, either right or left
A. Contralateral (congruent) homonymous hemianopia, which may be central (splitting the macula) or peripheral; also homonymous hemiachroma topsia B. Elementary (unformed) hallucinations-usually because of irritative lesions
101
Effects of left occipital disease
A. Right homonymous hemianopia B. If deep white matter and splenium of corpus callosum is involved, alexia without agraphia C. Visual object agnosia
102
Effects of right occipital disease
A. Left homonymous hemianopia B. With more extensive lesions, visual illusions (metamorphopsias) and hallucinations (more frequent with right-sided than left-sided lesions) C. Loss of topographic memory and visual orientation
103
Bilateral occipital disease
A. Cortical blindness bilateral hemianopias, B. Anton syndrome (visual anosognosia, denial of cortical blindness) C. Loss of perception of color (achromatopsia) D. Prosopagnosia (impaired face recognition, bilateral temporooccipital including fusiform gyrus) E. Balint syndrome (bilateral dorsal parietooccipital)