The Nervous System Notes Part 2
The Nervous System Notes Part 2
BRAIN
the largest and most complex mass of the nervous tissue in the body
Brain Regions
1. Cerebral Hemispheres (Cerebrum)
2. Diencephalon
3. Brain Stem
4. Cerebellum
Cerebral Hemispheres
are paired (left and right) superior parts of the brain
Collectively called the cerebrum
Include more than half of the brain mass
The surface is made of ridges (gyri = twisters) and grooves (sulci, sulcus =
furrows)
Fissures are deeper grooves which separates large regions of the brain
Cerebral hemisphere are separated by a single deep fissure called Longitudinal
Fissure
Lobes are named for the cranial bones that lie over them
THREE MAIN REGIONS OF CEREBRAL HEMISPHERE
1. Cortex is superficial gray matter, looks gray in fresh brain tissue
2. White matter
3. Basal nuclei are islands of gray matter situated deep within the white matter
Cerebral Hemispheres
Left Hemisphere:
Controls right side of body
Responsible for math, analytic, and Responsible for music, art, abstract
speech ideas
Spatial perception, the recognition of
faces
Corpus callosum:
Connection between the two hemispheres
Right Hemisphere:
Controls left side of body
Basal Nuclei
Islands of gray matter buried deep within the white matter of the cerebrum
Regulate voluntary motor activities by modifying instructions sent to skeletal muscles
by the primary motor cortex
Diencephalon
Thalamus
Encloses the third ventricle of the brain
Relay station for sensory impulses passing upward to the sensory cortex
Recognition of whether the sensation we are about to have is pleasant or unpleasant
Neurons of the sensory cortex localize and interpret the sensation
Epithalamus
Forms the roof of the third ventricle
PINEAL BODY- help control the circadian cycle of sleep and wakefulness by secreting
melatonin
CHOROID PLEXUS- forms cerebrospinal fluid
Brain Stem
Provides pathway for ascending and descending tracts
Produce programmed behaviors for key survival
About the side of a thumb (3 inches)
Includes midbrain, pons, medulla oblongata
Midbrain
Extend from the mammillary bodies to the pons inferiorly
CEREBRAL AQUEDUCT (tiny canal) connects the third and fourth ventricles
CEREBRAL PEDUNCLES (two bulging fiber tracts, little feet of the cerebrum) convey
ascending and descending impulses
CORPA QUADRIGEMINA (gemini) are visual and auditory reflex centers
Pons
means bridge
The rounded structure protruding just below the midbrain
Mostly composed of fiber tracts (bundles of fibers in the CNS)
Includes nuclei involved in the control of breathing
Medulla Oblongata
Most inferior part of your brain stem that merges into the spinal cord
Includes important fiber tracts
Contain important centers that control:
Heart rate
Blood pressure
Breathing
Swallowing
Vomiting
Fourth ventricle lies posterior to pons and medulla
Reticular Formation
Diffuse mass of gray matter along the brain stem
Involved in motor control of visceral organs (eg. Controlling smooth muscle in the
digestive tract)
RETICULAR ACTIVATION SYSTEM (RAS)
Plays a role in awake/sleep cycles and consciousness
Filter for incoming sensory information
Weak/repetitive signals are filtered out
Damage can cause coma (prolonged unconsciousness)
Cerebellum
Two hemispheres with convoluted surfaces
Outer cortex of gray matter and inner region of white matter
Controls balance
Provides precise timing for skeletal muscle activity and coordination of body
movements
Fibers connect to the cerebellum from the inner ear, eye, proprioceptors of skeletal
muscles and more
Also called little brain
Blood-brain Barrier
Includes the least permeable capillaries of the body
Allows water, glucose, and amino acids to pass through the capillary walls
Excludes many potentially harmful substances from entering the brain, such as wastes
(Metabolic wastes- urea, toxins, proteins, and most drugs)
Useless as a barrier against some substances
SPINAL CORD
Glistening white continuation of the brain stem
Extends from the foramen magnum of the skull to the first or second lumbar vertebra
Provides a two-way conduction pathway to and from the brain
Protected by the vertebrae and meninges
31 pairs of spinal nerves arise from the spinal cord
CAUDA EQUINA is a collection of spinal nerves at the inferior end