Prosencephalon Localization Flashcards

1
Q

what is the prosencephalon?

A

contains the cerebrum (telencephalon) and the thalamus (diencephalon); is also called the forebrain

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2
Q

what are the 5 functions of the prosencephalon?

A
  1. behavior
  2. consciousness/wakefulness
  3. fine motor activity (less important for animals)
  4. conscious perception of vision, hearing, touch, nociception, temperature, and proprioception
  5. SOME gait generation, but its role in this is less important in veterinary species
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3
Q

are there any true reflexes involved with the prosencephalon?

A

nope, just conscious, learned responses

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4
Q

what is the path of anything projecting into or out of the prosencephalon?

A

crosses the midline!! either at the optic chiasm or at the midbrain

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5
Q

where do seizures ALWAYS localize to, regardless of etiology?

A

prosencephalon!

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6
Q

describe mentation with a prosencephalon lesion

A

can be normal OR abnormal!

but if it is abnormal, you know the source of the abnormal mentation is intracranial, so either prosencephalon or ARAS in brainstem

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7
Q

how is conciousness maintained?

A

sensory input detected by ARAS and transmitted to diffuse cerebral cortex stimulation (medulla to pons to thalamus to internal capsule to corona radiata to cerebral cortex)

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8
Q

what are the 2 types of abnormal mentation?

A
  1. abnormal actual mentation: decreased consciousness (too sleepy)
  2. abnormal/inappropriate behavior: head press, propulsive/compulsive, get stuck in corners or furniture, loss of learned behaviors
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9
Q

what are the 4 ways to describe abnormal mentation and which implicate ARAS involvement?

A
  1. dull/obtunded/depressed/lethargic
  2. inappropriate
  3. semicoma: ARAS
  4. coma: ARAS
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10
Q

describe gait with a prosencephalon lesion (4)

A
  1. UMN from cerebrum have little input on gait generation in quadrupeds so gait is normal!! no weakness or ataxia
  2. may be propulsive (inappropriate mentation) or
  3. may see circling toward the lesion
  4. may also see head and body TURN toward side of lesion because animal does not know the side contralateral to the lesion (side controlled by lesion side) exists
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11
Q

describe GP deficits with a prosencephalon lesion

A

contralateral postural reaction deficits WITHOUT weakness; may be a lack of interpretation of where the limb is located (lights are on but no one is home)

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12
Q

describe cranial nerve responses with a prosencephalon lesion

A

responses imply cerebral input!!

menace response: may be absent because optic nerve crosses at chiasm to occipital cortex responsible for awareness of vision (make sure 7 is intact!)

might not have response to nasal mucosal stimulation: trigeminal nerve crosses at midbrain to the contralteral cortex for conscious awareness

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13
Q

what is hemi-inattention/hemi-neglect?

A
  1. occurs with prosencephalic lesions but is an uncommon presentation
  2. abnormal response to stimuli on contralateral side of body from lesion location because just unaware that the contralateral side exists
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14
Q

sum up a left-sided prosencephalic lesion (4)

A
  1. +/- seizures
  2. +/- abnormal mentation
  3. gait normal (+/- propulsive or circling to the left)
  4. all deficits right sided: +/- postural reactions, +/- abnormal menace or nasal mucosa response

not all signs happen all at once in all patients!

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15
Q

what might cause a bilateral prosencephalic lesions? (3)

A
  1. metabolic: hypertension, hepatic encephalopathy
  2. nutritional: thiamine deficiency
  3. toxic
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16
Q

describe a bilateral prosencephalic lesion

A
  1. abnormal mentation without lateralizing signs (most common presentation, dull)
  2. +/- compulsive walking
  3. +/- not walking (if mentation too abnormal)
  4. +/- postural reaction deficits in all 4 limbs
  5. +/- bilateral loss of menace and response to nasal mucosal stimulation
17
Q

how do you determine a lesion is procencephalic or more caudal?

A

the largely normal gait and lack of other deficits (like vestibular, cerebellar) clues you in to prosencephalon