Anatomy of the Nervous System Structure and Function January 17, 2002 Gross Anatomy.

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Anatomy of the Nervous System Structure and Function January 17, 2002 Gross Anatomy

Transcript of Anatomy of the Nervous System Structure and Function January 17, 2002 Gross Anatomy.

Page 1: Anatomy of the Nervous System Structure and Function January 17, 2002 Gross Anatomy.

Anatomy of the Nervous SystemStructure and Function

January 17, 2002

Gross Anatomy

Page 2: Anatomy of the Nervous System Structure and Function January 17, 2002 Gross Anatomy.

Five major divisions of the brain encephalon = “inside the head” Forebrain

• Telencephalon• Diencephalon

Midbrain• Mesencephalon

Hindbrain• Metencephalon• Myelencephalon (“medulla”)

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Brains stem

Diencephalon Mesencephalon Metencephalon Myelencephalon

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Diencephalon

Thalamus• top of the brain stem• receives sensory signals and sends them on to

sensory cortex

Hypothalamus• located just below anterior thalamus• regulation of motivated behaviors

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Mesencephalon

Tectum (“roof”)• dorsal surface of the brain stem• auditory and visual functions

Tegmentum• in front of tectum• processing pain and sensorimotor functions

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Metencephalon

Pons (buldge) of the brainstem Attachment of some cranial nerves

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Myelencephalon

Also called medulla Most posterior portion of the brain Large tracts running from brain to body Reticular formation (“little net”)

• sleep, attention, movement, muscle tone• reflexes - cardiac, circulatory, respiratory

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Telencephalon

Greatest growth in higher vertebrates Hemispheres - right and left Four lobes in cerebrum

• frontal• temporal• parietal• occipital

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Function of Telencephalon

Mediates complex functions• initiates voluntary movement• interprets sensory input• cognitive processes

• learning

• speech & language

• problem solving

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Cerebral Cortex

Layer of tissue covering cerebrum Convolutions

• fissures = furrows• central and lateral fissures divide lobes

• gyri = ridges Longitudinal fissure-separates hemispheres Cerebral commissures-connect hemispheres

• largest = corpus callosum

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Major Gyri

Precentral gyrus - primary motor area Postcentral gyrus - body sensations Superior temporal gyrus - auditory cortex Cingulate gyrus – emotional, somatic and

autonomic fxs

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Hippocampus (“sea horse”)

Shared by cerebral cortex and limbic system

Located in the medial temporal lobe Role in learning and memory

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Function of the Limbic System

Circuit of structures around the thalamus Regulate motivated behaviors

• “the four Fs”• fleeing

• feeding

• fighting

• sexual behavior

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Structures of the Limbic System

Amygdala (“almond”) Hippocampus (“sea horse”) Fornix (“arc”) Cingulate cortex (“encircling”) Septum Mammillary bodies

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Function of the Basal Ganglia

Voluntary motor response Example of dysfunction = Parkinson’s

• rigidity• tremors• poor movement initiation

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Structures of the Basal Ganglia

Amygdala Striatum (“striped structure”)

• Caudate (“tail-like”)• Putamen

Globus pallidus (“pale globe”)

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Brain Areas Relevant to Language Lichtheim-Geschwind Model

• Broca’s area• Wernicke’s area• Arcuate fasciculus• Angular gyrus

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Broca’s area

Posterior portion of lower left frontal lobe Speech and language production

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Wernicke’s area

Posterior portion of left temporal area Auditory comprehension

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Arcuate fasciculus

Pathway that relays nerve impulses between Broca’s and Wernicke’s areas

Connections between sound patterns and production area

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Angular gyrus

Parietal lobe Sensory properties of objects are associated

with words