Spinal cord function and dysfunction COPY Flashcards

1
Q

The effect on what is the most important in spinal injury

A

White matter

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2
Q

What does the cervical enlargement have extra motor neurones for?

A

They go to the muscles of the upper limbs

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3
Q

What does the lumbosacral enlargement have extra motor neurones for?

A

They go to the muscles of the lower limbs

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4
Q

What would a lesion below the lumbosacral enlargement cause

A

The spinal nerves below the lesion function would be affected, it would stop the pathway carrying motor innervations from the brain to the bladder so would cause incontinence

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5
Q

What would a lesion in the mid-thoracic region cause

A

Loss of voluntary control of the lower limbs (paraplegia)

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6
Q

A lesion above which vertebrae will result in not being able to breathe?

A

C3-C5

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7
Q

What part of the spinal cord is used to sample CSF

A

Lumbar cistern

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8
Q

What are the 3 layers of the meninges

A

Dura mater
Arachnoid mater
Pia mater

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9
Q

Where is CSF in the meninges

A

The subarachnoid space

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10
Q

What are denticulate ligaments

A

Little protrusions of the pia mater that tether the spinal cord and hold it in the middle of the subarachnoid space

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11
Q

What is in the epidural space

A

It is full of venous plexuses and fatty tissue

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12
Q

Why is the epidural space clinically useful

A

You can inject anaesthetic by giving an epidural

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13
Q

What are the three most important tracts in spinal cord injury

A

Lateral corticospinal tract- motor (fine movements)
Dorsal columns- sensory (touch, vibration and pressure)
Spinothalamic tract- sensory (pain and temperature)

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14
Q

What are the two stages of response to injury in the lateral corticospinal tract

A

Stage 1- spinal shock- lose all reflex activity below the lesion- no direct damage, they just stop working (flaccid paralysis)- the limbs become floppy and little muscle tone
Stage 2- return of reflexes- hyperreflexia, if you test the knee jerk reflex it will go mad. You also get spasticity where the patient experiences spontaneous muscle contraction. There is a very high muscle tone (rigid paralysis)

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15
Q

Where do lateral corticospinal tracts decussate

A

Medulla

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16
Q

If you have a lesion in the mid thoracic region, will it effect the same or other side

A

same

17
Q

Where do sensory neurones decussate

A

Medulla

18
Q

Where do pain nerves decussate

A

Immediately as they enter the spinal cord- When the neurone gets to the dorsal horn, it synapses with a second cell and then that cell sends itself immediately across the midline

19
Q

Which leg will lose pain sensation if there is a lesion on the left side

A

The right

20
Q

What is syringomelia

A

Syringomelia is a loss of temperature sensation in the arms but not legs is caused by formation of a space in the spinal cord called a syrinx. It is caused by an enlargement of the spinal cord