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The Central Nervous System. Protection of the CNS. The brain and spinal cord are protected by several layers: Skeletal tissue (cranium and vertebral column) Meninges (layers of tissue that cushion the brain) Dura mater Arachnoid tissue Pia mater Cerebrospinal fluid
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Protection of the CNS • The brain and spinal cord are protected by several layers: • Skeletal tissue (cranium and vertebral column) • Meninges (layers of tissue that cushion the brain) • Dura mater • Arachnoid tissue • Pia mater • Cerebrospinal fluid • Shock-absorbing medium • Provides a optimum and stable environment for generating nerve impulses • Provides a medium for the exchange of nutrients and wastes between blood and nervous tissue.
Blood-Brain Barrier • The meninges protect the CNS by preventing direct circulation of blood through the brain and spinal cord • Capillary endothelial cells have tight junctions • Special neurons called astrocytes stimulate tight junctions • substances that can pass through the lipid bilayerare unrestricted (O2, CO2, H2O, alcohol, caffeine, nicotine, steroids) • Substances that need to be transported across the lipid bilayer are restricted (glucose, amino acids, ions) • Some substances cannnot pass BBB (some harmful substances, toxins, posions, infectious agents, some hormones)
Spinal Cord • Functions as centre for reflex actions.
Spinal Cord • Communicates between brain and spinal nerves.
Spinal Cord • Gray matter shaped like butterfly or letter "H” • Coloured by unmyelinated cell bodies and short fibres; made of axons of sensory neurons, dendrites/cell bodies of motor axons, and interneurons.
Spinal Cord • White matter is coloured white due to myelinated long fibres of interneurons; this outermost region contains interneurons grouped into dorsal tracts that send information toward brain (ascending tracts) or into ventral tracts that carry information down from brain (descending tracts).
Spinal Cord • Tracts cross over so that left side of brain controls right side of body.
Divisions of the Brain The brain is divided into: • medulla oblongata • cerebellum • pons • midbrain • hypothalamus • thalamus • cerebrum
Ventricles • The brain also has four interconnected cavities or ventricles, filled with cerebrospinal fluid
Brain Stem • medulla oblongata • pons • midbrain
Brain Stem Medulla oblongata: • lies between spinal cord and pons anterior to cerebellum • contains centres for heartbeat, respiration, vasoconstriction • contains reflex centres for vomiting, coughing, swallowing, etc.
Brain Stem Pons: • means "bridge” • contains tracts bridging the cerebellum with the rest of CNS • helps regulate breathing rate and some reflexes
Brain Stem The midbrain: • processes sensory information from eyes, ears and nose • has a role in eye movement and control of skeletal muscles • has reflex centres for head movements in response to visual, auditory, and tactile stimuli • also is a relay centre visual and auditory information between hindbrain and forebrain
Diencephalon Hypothalamus: • forms floor of third ventricle of brain • functions in homeostasis by regulating hunger, sleep, thirst, temperature, water balance, blood pressure • controls the pituitary gland (link between nervous and endocrine systems)
Diencephalon Thalamus: • is in roof of third ventricle • serves as central relay station for sensory impulses (except smell) traveling to appropriate regions of the cerebrum
Cerebellum • Below posterior portion of cerebrum, separated from brainstem by fourth ventricle - surface is gray matter, interior is mostly white matter • Functions in unconscious coordination of balance, posture, reflexes and body movements • Also coordinates fine voluntary movements using input from specialized sensory neurons in the skeletal muscles and joints called proprioreceptors
Cerebrum • responsible for consciousness and is largest portion of brain • outer layer is the unmyelinated cerebral cortex • cortex is divided into right and left cerebral hemispheres connected by corpus callosum • cortex is 2-4 mm thick, and is highly folded into grooves (or sulci)
Cerebrum • Various regions of the cerebrum specialize: • Frontal lobe - contains primary motor cortex for voluntary skeletal muscles, premotor area for planning movements, Broca’s area for speech and prefrontal area for decision making, creativity, personality traits • Parietal lobe– contains primary sensory cortex which handles information from skin, muscles, visceral organs, taste buds – also helps to process information about body position and orientation • Temporal lobe – auditory cortex – interprets characteristics of sound and hearing • Occipital lobe – contains primary visual cortex
Limbic System • Composed of basal ganglia, contains neural pathways that join frontal lobes, temporal lobes, thalamus, and hypothalamus. • Causes person to experience pain, pleasure, rage, addiction, etc., to guide behaviour to increase survival. • Also critical in learning and long- and short-term memory.
The brain is a wonderful organ. It starts working the moment you get up and does not stop until you get into the office . ~ Robert Frost • My girlfriend and I went on a picnic. I don't know how she did it, but she got poison ivy on the brain. When it itched, the only way she could scratch it was to think about sandpaper. ~ Steven Wright