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Anatomy and Physiology Chapter 11 Nervous System II. Meninges membranes surrounding CNS protect CNS three layers dura mater – outer, tough arachnoid mater – thin, weblike pia mater – inner, very thin. Chapter 11 Nervous System II. Dura Mater. outermost layer
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Anatomy and Physiology Chapter 11 Nervous System II
Meninges • membranes surrounding CNS • protect CNS • three layers • dura mater – outer, tough • arachnoid mater – thin, weblike • pia mater – inner, very thin Chapter 11Nervous System II
Dura Mater • outermost layer • made of tough, white dense connective tissue • contains many blood vessels and nerves • attaches to inside of cranial cavity • some areas split into two layers which venous blood flows through
strong tubular sheath that surrounds the spinal cord • sheath is separated from spinal cord by an epidermal space which contains blood vessels, loose connective tissue, and adipose tissue
Arachnoid Mater • thin weblike membrane between dura and pia maters • lacks blood vessels • subarachnoid space between arachnoid and pia maters • contains cerebrospinal fluid (clear and watery)
Pia Mater • attached to brain and spinal cord • contains many nerves and blood vessels that nourish underlying cells
Ventricles and Cerebrospinal Fluid • Ventricles are interconnected cavities filled with cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) • CSF completely surrounds the brain and spinal cord providing protection • CSF helps maintain a stable ionic concentration • CSF provides a pathway to blood for waste
Spinal Cord • Slender column of nerve fibers • Continuous with brain • Extends down through vertebral canal • Tapers and terminates near the disk between 1st and 2nd lumbar vetebrae • Fibers extend downward to become spinal nerves at the remaining lumbar and sacral levels – filum terminale
Structure of the Spinal Cord • 31 segments each of which gives rise to a pair of spinal nerves • Cervical enlargement – supplies nerves to upper limbs • Lumbar enlargement – supplies nerves to lower limbs
Functions of the Spinal Cord • Conduit for nerve impulse to and from the brain • Center for spinal reflexes • Nerve tracts and nerves spinal provide for 2 way communication between the brain and body parts outside the brain
Ascending tracts conduct sensory impulses to the brain • Descending tracts Conduct motor impulses from the brain to muscles and glands • Nerve fibers in the tracts are axons
Reflex Arcs • Simple nerve pathways that carry out reflexes • Pathway: Receptor sensory neuron interneurons in CNS motor neurons effectors (muscles & glands) • Spinal reflexes have reflex arcs that pass through the spinal cord
Reflex Behavior • Automatic and subconscious responses to stimuli inside or outside the body • Help maintain homeostasis by controlling many involuntary processes: heart rate, breathing rate, blood pressure and digestion • Also control involuntary actions: swallowing, sneezing, coughing and vomiting • Ex: patellar tendon reflex, withdrawal reflex
Reflex Behavior • example is the knee-jerk reflex • simple monosynaptic reflex • helps maintain an upright posture
Reflex Behavior • example is a withdrawal reflex • prevents or limits tissue damage
Brain Major Parts • cerebrum • two hemispheres • basal nuclei (ganglia) • diencephalon • brainstem • cerebellum
Brain- General functions • Largest and most complex part of NS • Has about one hundred billion multipolar neurons and innumerable nerve fibers • Responsible for sensations and perceptions • Issues motor commands and coordinates muscular movements
Regulates visceral activities • Responsible for reasoning and memory • Provides characteristics of personality
Brain Development • Forms during early embryonic stage • Begins as neural tube with 3 cavities (vesicles) that gives rise to the CNS • Walls of the tube give rise to various regions of the brain, brain stem, and spinal cord
Brain Development Three Major Vesicles • Forebrain • Midbrain • Hindbrain
Structure of the Cerebrum • Largest part of the mature brain • Consists of 2 large masses called cerebral hemispheres • Corpus callosum (bridge of nerve fibers) connects the 2 hemispheres • Convolutions (ridges) separated by grooves found on the surface • Sulcus – shallow groove • Fissure –deep groove
Lobes of the cerebral hemisphere are named after the skull bones they are under: frontal lobe, parietal lobe, temporal lobe, occipital lobe, and insula • Thin layer of gray matter (cerebral cortex) makes up the outermost portion and has about 75% of all nerve cell bodies in NS
Mass of white matter ( myelinated nerve fibers) under the cerebral cortex Some pass between hemispheres Some carry sensory or motor impulses
Lobes of Cerebral Hemispheres • Frontal • Parietal • Temporal • Occipital • Insula
Functions of the Cerebrum • Regions of the cerebral cortex perform specific functions • Primary motor areas – Fig 11.16 Pg 391 send impulses that cross from one side of the brain to the other within the brain stem • Sensory Areas – Fig 11.16 Pg 391 interpret impulses from sensory receptors
Motor Areas • Primary Motor Areas • frontal lobes • control voluntary muscles • Broca’s Area • anterior to primary motor cortex • usually in left hemisphere • controls muscles needed for speech • Frontal Eye Field • above Broca’s area • controls voluntary movements of eyes and eyelids
Sensory Areas • Cutaneous Sensory Area • parietal lobe • interprets sensations on skin • Sensory Area for Taste • near bases of the central sulci • Sensory Area for Smell • arise from centers deep within the cerebrum • Visual Area • occipital lobe • interprets vision • Auditory Area • temporal lobe • interprets hearing
Association Areas – interconnect with each other and with other brain structures - occupy anterior portions of frontal lobes and widespread in the lateral portions of the parietal, temporal, and occipital lobes
Association Areas Frontal Lobe Association Areas • concentrating • planning • complex problem solving Temporal Lobe Association Areas • interpret complex sensory experiences • store memories of visual scenes, music, and complex patterns Parietal Lobe Association Areas • understanding speech • choosing words to express thought Occipital Lobe Association Areas • analyze and combine visual images with other sensory experiences
General interpretive area – primary role in complex thought processing - located where the parietal, temporal, and occipital association areas join near the posterior end of the lateral sulcus
Hemisphere Dominance • Both hemispheres participate in basic functions such as receiving and interpreting sensory impulses, controlling skeletal muscles on the opposite side of the body, and storing memory • Most people have a dominant hemisphere for language related activities, and skills requiring verbal, analytical, and computational skills
90% of people are left hemisphere dominant, some are right dominant, and some are equally dominant • Broca’s area on one side controls speech – usually the left side • Nondominant hemisphere specializes in nonverbal functions • Nerve fibers in the corpus callosum connect the hemispheres and transfer information
Hemisphere Dominance • The left hemisphere is dominant is most individuals • Nondominant hemisphere controls • nonverbal tasks • motor tasks • understanding and interpreting musical and visual patterns • provides emotional and intuitive thought processes • Dominant hemisphere controls • speech • writing • reading • verbal skills • analytical skills • computational skills
Memory Short Term • working memory • closed neuronal circuit • circuit is stimulated over and over • when impulse flow ceases, memory does also • unless it enters long-term memory via memory consolidation Long Term • changes structure or function of neurons • enhances synaptic transmission • 10 billion neurons can form 60 trillion synapses allowing limitless number of memories
Basal Nuclei (ganglia) • masses of gray matter • deep within cerebral hemispheres • produces dopamine • controls certain muscular activities primarily by inhibiting motor functions