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Central Nervous System. Brain and Cranial Nerves. Brain. 20 billion neurons Carries out the most complex functions Contains 98% of the neurons in the body Weight of the brain is on average 3 lbs About 1200cc in size NO correlation between brain size and intelligence. Brain Regions.
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Central Nervous System Brain and Cranial Nerves
Brain • 20 billion neurons • Carries out the most complex functions • Contains 98% of the neurons in the body • Weight of the brain is on average 3 lbs • About 1200cc in size • NO correlation between brain size and intelligence
Cerebrum • Two large hemispheres divided by the longitudinal fissure • Important functions: • Thought processes • Memory storage and retrieval • Intellectual function • Complex motor patterns
Diencephalon • Deep portion of the brain attached to the cerebrum • Three major regions • 1. Epithalamus – pineal gland-secretes melatonin (regulation of the “body clock”) • 2. Thalamus – sensory information relay and processing • 3. Hypothalamus – visceral control center. Involved in emotions, autonomic function and hormone production
Mesencephalon(Midbrain) • Part of the brain stem • Important functions: • 1. Processing of visual and auditory information • 2. Generation of involuntary somatic motor responses • 3. Maintenance of consciousness
Pons • Inferior to mesencephalon • Somatic motor and visceral control • Relay of sensory information to thalamus and cerebellum • Connects cerebellum to brain stem
Cerebellum • Two small hemispheres • Posterior to pons • Function of cerebellum is to automatically adjust motor activities based on sensory information and memories of past learned patterns of movement
Medulla Oblongata • Connection of brain to spinal cord • Functions of the medulla are: • 1. Relay sensory information to thalamus and other brain regions • 2. Centers concerned with autonomic regulation of heart rate, blood pressure, and digestive activities
Gray matter and White matter • Outer layer of superficial gray matter • Neural cortex • Neuron cell bodies • Internal white matter • Myelinated connections • Isolated areas of gray matter called NUCLEI
Ventricles of the brain • Fluid filled cavities of the brain • Filled with cerebral spinal fluid (CSF) • Two lateral ventricles separated by the septum pellucidum • Third ventricle in the diencephalon • Cerebral aqueduct (Aqueduct of midbrain) • Fourth ventricle
Cranial Meninges • Membranes that surround the brain • Help protect the brain from the surrounding bone • Three cranial meninges • Dura – tough outer layer • Arachnoid – middle layer • Pia – inner layer that adheres to the surface of the brain
Special regions of dura mater • Falx cerebri • Transverse fissure • Tentorium cerebelli • Falx cerebelli
Cerebrospinal fluid • Fills the ventricles of the brain • Cushions the neural tissue • Supports the brain • Transports nutrients, chemical messages, and waste products
Production of CSF • Choroid plexus • Floor of lateral ventricles • Roof of third ventricle • Roof of 4th ventricle • 500ml/day produced • Total volume 150ml
Cerebrum • Largest region of the brain • Paired cerebral hemispheres • Processing of sensory and motor information • Cerebral neurons exert direct and indirect control over somatic motor neurons
Cerebral Hemispheres • Outer layer of neural cortex – gray matter • Longitudinal fissure separates hemispheres • Elevated ridges – gyri • Shallow depressions are called sulci • Deeper grooves are fissures
Cerebral lobes • 1. Frontal – primary motor cortex • 2. Parietal – primary sensory cortex • 3. Occipital – visual cortex • 4. Temporal – auditory and olfactory cortex • 5. Insula – control of visceral functions, integration of autonomic information
Primary Motor Cortex • Cerebral cortex anterior of the central sulcus • Precentral gyrus • Neurons of this region direct the voluntary movement of skeletal muscles • These neurons are called pyramidal cells • Pyramidal system provides voluntary motor control • Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS)
Primary Sensory Cortex • Cortex posterior to central sulcus • Postcentral gyrus of parietal lobe • Neurons receive information on touch, pressure, pain, taste, and temperature • Occipital lobe is primary visual cortex • Temporal lobe receives information dealing with hearing and smelling • Insula receives sensory information dealing with taste
Association areas • Regions of the cortex connected to the primary sensory and motor regions of the brain • INTEGRATION regions • Plan, prepare, coordinate motor output based sensory input from others areas of the cerebral cortex
Integrative Centers • Receive and process information from many different association areas • Direct complex motor activities and perform complicated analytical functions • PRE-FRONTAL CORTEX • Integrates information from sensory association areas • Performs abstract intellectual functions
White Matter • Covered by the gray matter • Myelinated fibers that connect various regions of the brain together • Association fibers – interconnect areas of neural cortex within the same hemisphere • Commissural fibers – fiber tracts that connect the two cerebral hemispheres • Projection fibers – tracts that link the cerebrum with other regions of the brain and spinal cord
Diencephalon • Thalamus – switching and relay center for sensory and motor information • Information filter • Hypothalamus – emotions and visceral processes • Autonomic functions
Limbic System • Nuclei (neuron cell bodies) and tracts (white fibers) that border the cerebrum and diencephalon • Functions: • Emotional states and related behavior • Links conscious intellectual functions of brain to unconscious and autonomic functions of the brain • Memory storage and retrival
Mesencephalon(Midbrain) • Nuclei that process visual and auditory information • Corpora quadrigemina consists of the: • Superior colliculus – visual inputs • Inferior colliculus – auditory data
Pons • Origin of cranial nerves V, VI, VII, and VIII • Involuntary control of respiration • Relay and processing center for cerebellar commands
Cerebellum • Two hemispheres each with 2 lobes • Internal white matter is called the arbor vitae (tree of life) • Cerebellum is responsible for: • Maintenance of balance and equilibrium • Fine-tuning voluntary and involuntary movements
Medulla Oblongata • Connection of brain and spinal cord • Medulla functions: • Relay station along sensory and motor pathways • Origin of cranial nerves VIII, IX, X, XI, and XII • Autonomic functions related to heart rate, contraction strength of heart, blood flow, pace of respiratory movements
Cranial Nerves • Components of the PNS • Twelve pairs of cranial nerves connected to the brain • Numbered I through XII • Have either motor, sensory or mixed functions
I Olfactory II Optic III Oculomotor IV Trochlear V Trigeminal VI Abducens VII Facial VIII Vestibulocochlear IX Glossopharyngeal X Vagus XI Spinal Accessory XII Hypoglossal Sensory Sensory Motor Motor Mixed Motor Mixed Sensory Mixed Mixed Motor Motor Cranial Nerves