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Brain and Cranial Nerves
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Brain and Cranial Nerves

Feb 15, 2016

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Brain and Cranial Nerves. Parts of the Brain. Parts of the Brain. CEREBRUM. DIENCEPHALON:. Thalamus. Hypothalamus. BRAIN STEM:. CEREBELLUM. Midbrain. Pons. Medulla oblongata. Spinal cord. (b) Sagittal section, medial view. Parts of the Brain. Meninges. Meninges. Ventricles. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

Brain

and

Cranial Nerves

Page 2: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

Parts of the Brain

Page 3: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

Parts of the Brain

CEREBRUM

(b) Sagittal section, medial view

CEREBELLUM

Spinal cord

DIENCEPHALON:

Thalamus

Hypothalamus

BRAIN STEM:

Midbrain

Pons

Medulla oblongata

Page 4: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

Parts of the Brain

Page 5: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

Meninges

Page 6: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

Meninges

Page 7: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

Ventricles

Page 8: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

Ventricles

Page 9: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

Origin and Flow of CSF

Page 10: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

Cerebrum

perception - sensory

initiate voluntary movements

memory

learning

understanding

conscious behavior

Page 11: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

• The lobes of the cerebrum correspond to the bones of the

braincase which bear the same names.

frontalparietal

temporaloccipital

Cerebrum

parietal

temporal

frontal

occipital

Page 12: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

Cerebrum

Page 13: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

Cerebrum

Page 14: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

Cerebral Gray and White Matter

Page 15: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

Cerebrum Functional Areas

1. Sensory areas

2. Motor areas

3. Association area

Page 16: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

Cerebrum Functional AreasPrimary somatosensory area (1, 2, 3)

Primary visual area (17)

Primary auditory area (41, 42)

Primary gustatory area (43)

Primary olfactory area (28 - not visible)

Primary motor area (4)

Broca’s area (44, 45 left hemisphere)

Somatosensory association area (5, 7)

Prefrontal cortex (9, 10, 11, 12 -medial view only)

Visual association area (18, 19)

Auditory association Area (22)

Wernicke’s area (22, 39, 40 - left hemisphere)

Common integrative area (5, 7, 39, 40)

Premotor area (6)

Frontal eye field (8)

Page 17: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

Cerebrum Functional Areas

Page 18: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

Cerebrum Functional Areas

Page 19: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

Cerebrum Motor/Sensory

Page 20: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

Lateralization

Page 21: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

Basal Nuclei• The basal nuclei also control subconscious contractions of

skeletal muscles. Examples include automatic arm swings while

walking and true laughter in response to a joke.

Page 22: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

Limbic System• Encircling the upper part of the brain stem and the corpus callosum is

a ring of structures on the inner border of the cerebrum and floor of the

diencephalon that constitutes the limbic system.

• The limbic system is sometimes called the

“emotional brain” because it plays a

primary role in promoting a range of

emotions, including pleasure, pain,

docility, affection, fear, and anger.

• Together with parts of the cerebrum,

the limbic system also functions in

memory.

Page 23: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

Brain Waves• Summing waves of different frequency

produces some characteristic, and diagnostic

patterns.– Alpha (10–12 Hz (cycles/sec) waves are

present when awake but disappear

during sleep. – Beta (14–30 Hz) waves are present with

sensory input and mental activity when

the nervous system is active.– Theta (4–7 Hz) waves indicate emotional

stress or a brain disorder.– Delta (1–5 Hz) waves appear only during

sleep in adults but indicate brain damage

in an awake adult.

Page 24: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

The medulla begins at the inferior border of the pons and extends to the foramen magnum. It contains all ascending and descending tracts extending between the spinal cord and cerebrum.

Brain Stem - Medulla Oblongata

The medulla contains nuclei which are regulators for vital body functions.

Page 25: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

Medulla Oblongata

Axons from the left pyramid cross over to the right and axons on the right cross over to the left (decussation of pyramids) – so that the left hemisphere of the brain controls the right side muscles, while the right hemisphere controls the left side.

Page 26: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

Brain Stem -Pons• The pons lies directly above the medulla and anterior to the

cerebellum (2.5 cm). It acts as a bridge connecting the spinal cord

with the brain and

parts of the brain with

each other.

Page 27: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

Brain Stem- Midbrain• The midbrain extends from the pons to the

diencephalon. – The cerebral aqueduct passes through the midbrain

connecting the 3rd ventricleabove with the 4th

ventricles below

(both locations

of CSF formation

and circulation.)

Page 28: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

Reticular Formation

Page 29: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

Cerebellum

Page 30: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

Cerebellum

Page 31: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

Cerebellum

1. Cerebrum initiates voluntary muscle contractions and notifies cerebellum.

2. Cerebellum gets information from proprioceptors.

3. Assesses information.

4. Dispatches “blueprint” for coordination to cerebrum

Compares intention with actual performance

Page 32: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

Diencephalon

Page 33: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

Diencephalon - Thalamus

Major relay station for sensory ascending

to sensory cortex, and inputs of subcortical

motor nuclei and the cerebellum

All sensory input

Sort out information

Page 34: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

Diencephalon - Hypothalamus

1. Autonomic control center

2. Center for emotional response

3. Body temperature regulation

4. Regulation of food intake

5. Regulation of water balance and thirst

6. Regulation of sleep-wake cycles

7. Control of endocrine system

Page 35: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

Diencephalon- Epithalamus

• Pineal gland– secretes melatonin

during darkness– promotes sleepiness &

sets biological clock• Habenular nuclei

– emotional responses to odors

Page 36: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

Cranial Nerves vs. Spinal NervesSpinal Cranial

Designation C1-8, T1-12, L1-5, S1-5,

Co1

Roman Numerals

I – XII

Number 31 pairs 12 pairs

Origin Spinal cord Brain

Number of roots

2 - a dorsal and a ventral

rootSingle root

Contents MixedMost mixed; some

sensory only

Target Limbs/TrunkAll in the Head/Neck

(vagus n leaves)

Page 37: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

Cranial Nerves

Page 38: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

I. Olfactory nerve

Page 39: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

II. Optic Nerve

Page 40: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

III. Oculomotor nerve

VI. Abducens nerveIV. Trochlear nerve

Page 41: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

V. Trigeminal nerve

Page 42: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

VII. Facial nerve

Page 43: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

VIII. Vestibulocochlear nerve

Page 44: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

IX. Glossopharyngeal nerve

Page 45: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

X. Vagus nerve

Page 46: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

XI. Accessory nerve

Page 47: Brain  and  Cranial Nerves

XII. Hypoglossal nerve