Topic 10 - Spinal cord Flashcards

1
Q

Describe the procedure and used of epidural injections

A
  • Injection into epidural space, doesn’t penetrate the meninges
  • Done at L3/4 or L4/5 vertebral level
  • Used to administer analgesia - block sensory fibres to prevent pain
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2
Q

Describe the structure of the coccyx

A
  • Articulates w/ apex of sacrum
  • Lack of vertebral arch - no spinal cord
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3
Q

Where is the supracristal line?

A

At the level of the iliac crest, marks the location of L4

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4
Q

Describe the venous drainage of the spinal cord

A
  • 3 anterior and 3 posterior spinal veins - valveless, form anastomosing network on surface of spinal cord + radicular veins
    • Drain into internal and external venous plexus, which drain to the systemic segmental veins
    • Internal vertebral plexus drain to dural venous sinuses superiorly
  • Epidural space contains Baston’s veins/plexus
  • Also subarachnoid veins
  • Veins exit at segmental levels
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5
Q

Describe the structural features of thoracic vertebrae

A
  • Articulate with ribs
  • Spinous processes point inferiorly + posteriorly
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6
Q

Describe the arterial supply of the spinal cord

A
  • 3 longitudinal arteries
    • Anterior spinal arteries - from branches of vertebral arteries, run in anterior median fissure
    • 2 posterior spinal arteries - from vertebral or posteroinferior cerebellar arteries, anastomose in pia
    • anterior and posterior segmental medullary arteries - small vessels, enter with nerve roots
      • Largest anterior segmental medullary artey = artery of Adamkiewicz (from inferior intercostal or upper lumber arteries, supplies inferior 2/3 of spinal cord)
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7
Q

How are the cervical and lumbar spinal segments structurally distinct? Why?

A

Have large ventral and dorsal horns - innervate limbs so need high sensory and motor output

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8
Q

Describe the segmentation of the spinal cord

A
  • 8 cervical
  • 12 thoracic
  • 5 lumbar
  • 5 sacral
  • 1 coccygeal
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9
Q

Describe the clinical significance of the lumbar cistern

A

Site for epidural injections and lumbar punctures

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10
Q

Describe the structure of intravertebral discs

A
  • Fibrocartilaginous cylinder, between vertebrae
  • Allows flexibility of spine, acts as shock absorber
  • Wedge shaped in lumbar and thoracic
  • Two parts - nucleus pulposus (gelatinous) and annulus fibrosis (tough, collagenous, surrounds nucleus pulposus)
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11
Q

Describe the arrangement of the vertebrae in the vertebral column

A

33 vertebrae separated by intravertebral discs

  • 7 cervical
  • 12 thoracic
  • 5 lumbar
  • 5 (fused) sacral
  • 4 (fused) coccygeal
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12
Q

Describe the curvature of the spine

A
  • Cervical lordosis
  • Thoracic kyphosis
  • Lumbar lordosis
  • Sacral kyphosis
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13
Q

Describe the clinical importance of the anterior spinal artery

A

Anterior spinal artery syndrome - loss of urinary and/or faecal continence, impaired motor function in legs/spasticity

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14
Q

Describe the procedure and use of lumbar punctures

A
  • Penetrates dura to access CSF
  • Diagnostic - withdraw and test CSF or test pressure of CSF
  • Therapeutic - antibiotic administration, route for chemotherapy
  • L3/4 or L4/5 vertebral level - cauda equina won’t be damaged
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15
Q

Describe the beginning and end of the spinal cord

A
  • Begins as continuation of medulla oblongata, ends at conus medullaris
  • Becomes cauda equina
  • Cord terminates at L3/4 in newborns, L1/2 in adults - vertebral column lengthens more than spinal cord during development
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16
Q

Describe the arrangement of white and grey matter in the spinal cord

A
  • Inner grey matter
    • Dorsal horn (sensory)
    • Intermediate horn
    • Ventral horn (motor)
  • Outer white matter
    • Dorsal funiculus
    • Lateral funiculus
    • Ventral funiculus
17
Q

List the ligaments of the vertebral column

A
  • Anterior and posterior longitudinal ligament (run full length of vertebral column)
  • Ligamentum flavum
  • Interspinous/supraspinous ligaments
  • Intertrasverse ligaments
18
Q

What is the role of the filum terminale?

A

Fibrous tissue which extends from conus medullaris to sacrum - stops movement of the cauda equina

19
Q

What is the clinical significance of Baston’s plexus?

A
  • Anastomose closely with venous drainage of abdominal/pelvic organs
  • Major route of spread of cancer from deep pelvic regions
  • Valveless
20
Q

Describe the structural features of sacral vertebrae

A

Fused, facets for articulations w/ pelvis at sacroiliac joint

21
Q

Describe the structural features of lumbar vertebrae

A
  • Largest - big bodies for weight bearing
  • Short spinous body - point less inferiorly
22
Q

Describe the origins and path of spinal nerves

A
  • Each spinal cord segment gives rise to 2 spinal nerves - L and R
  • C1-7 pass through their intervertebral foramen above the level of the corresponding vertebral body
  • C8 onwards exit below the level of the vertebral body
23
Q

Describe the structure of vertebrae

A
  • Anterior vertebral body
    • Weight bearing
    • Lined by hyaline cartilage
    • Separated by IVD
  • Posterior vertebral arch
    • Forms vertebral foramen, line up to give vertebral canal which spinal cord travels through
    • Spinous processes - posterior
    • Transverse processes - in thoracic articulate with ribs
    • Articular processes - join one vertebra to its corresponding vertebrae superiorly/inferiorly
24
Q

Describe the structural features of cervical vertebrae

A
  • C2-C6/7 spinous processes bifurcate
  • Transverse foramina transmit vertebral arteries to brain
  • C1/2 are unique (atlas/axis) - odontoid peg