Central Nervous System - Francis Howell High School
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Transcript Central Nervous System - Francis Howell High School
Central Nervous System
The CNS is made up of the spinal
cord and brain
The Meninges
Special covering membranes, the
meninges, protect and support the
spinal cord and delicate brain
The cranial meninges: the dura mater,
arachnoid, pia mater, are continuous
with those of the spinal cord.
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Dura mater: covers the brain and spinal
cord
Epidural space separates the spinal dura
mater from the walls of the vertebral
canal
The subarachnoid space of the
arachnoid layer contains cerebrospinal
fluid (CSF)
CSF acts as a shock absorber and a
diffusion medium for dissolved gases,
nutrients, chemical messages and waste
products
Pia mater is bound to the underlying
neural tissue.
The Spinal Cord
In addition to relaying information to
and from the brain, the spinal cord
integrates and processes information
own its own.
The spinal cord as 31 segments, each
associated with a pair of dorsal root
ganglia and their dorsal roots and a pair
of ventral roots.
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The white matter contains myelinated
and unmyelinated axons
The gray matter contains the cell bodies of
neurons and glial cells
The projections of gray matter toward the
outer surface of the spinal cord are called
horns.
The Brain
There are 6 segments to the adult brain
Cerebrum
Diencephalon
Midbrain
Cerebellum
Pons
Medulla oblongata
The central passageway of the brain
expands to form four chambers called
ventricles.
CSF continuously circulates from the
ventricles and central canal of the spinal
cord into the subarachnoid space of the
meninges that surround the CNS
Cerebrum
The cerebrum is responsible for:
conscious thought
intellectual functions,
memory
complex involuntary motor patterns
The surface of the cerebrum contains gyri
(elevated ridges) separated by sulci (shallow
depressions) or deeper groves (fissures)
The longitudinal fissure separates the two
cerebral hemispheres.
The central sulcus marks the boundary
between and frontal lobe and the parietal
lobe.
Other sulci form the boundaries of the
temporal lobe and the occipital lobe.
Each cerebral hemisphere receives
sensory information and generates
motor commands that concern the
opposite side of the body.
The primary motor cortex of the
precentral gyrus directs voluntary
movements.
The primary sensory cortex receives
somatic sensory information from
touch, pressure, pain and temperature
receptors.
Association areas, control our ability to
understand sensory information and
coordinate a motor response
The left hemisphere is usually the
categorical hemisphere which contains
the general interpretive and speech
centers and is responsible for language
based skills.
The right hemisphere, or
representational hemisphere is
concerned with spatial relationships and
analyses
s
The basal nuclei lie within the central
white matter and aid in the coordination
of learned movement patterns and
other somatic motor activities.
The limbic system includes the
hippocampus, which is involved in
memory and learning and the mamillary
bodies which control reflex
The limbic system includes the
hippocampus, which is involved in
memory and learning and the mamillary
bodies which control reflex movements
such as eating.
The functions of the limbic system
involve emotional states and related
behavioral drives.
The Diencephalon
Provides the switching and relay centers
necessary to integrate the conscious and
unconscious sensory and motor pathways.
Contains
pineal gland
choroid plexus
thalamus
hypothalamus
Thalamus
Final relay point for ascending sensory
information
Only a small portion of the arriving
sensory information is passed to the
cerebral cortex
Rest is passed to the basal nuclei and
centers in the brain stem
Hypothalamus
Important control and integrative centers
Produces emotions and behavior drives
Coordinates activities of the nervous and
endocrine system
Secretes hormones,
Coordinate voluntary and autonomic functions
Regulates body temperature
The Brain Stem
Three regions
The midbrain processes visual and auditory
information and generates involuntary somatic
motor responses.
Pons connects the cerebellum to the brain stem
and is involved with somatic and visceral motor
control
Medulla oblongata: connects to spinal cord relays
sensory information and regulates autonomic
functions.
Cerebellum
Oversees the body’s postural muscles
and programs and tunes voluntary and
involuntary movements
Cerebellar peduncles are tracts that link
the cerebellum with the brain stem,
cerebrum and spinal cord.
More medulla…
Medulla oblongata connects the brain to the
spinal cord.
Its nuclei relay information from the spinal
cord and brain stem to the cerebral cortex.
Its reflex centers including the cardiovascular
centers and the respiratory rhythmicity
centers, control or adjust the activities of one
or more peripheral systems.