Top Banner
CNS: Anatomy and Physiology Dr. Milind Kothari Professor of Neurology Assoc Dean Student Affairs
39

CNS: Anatomy and Physiology Dr. Milind Kothari Professor of Neurology Assoc Dean Student Affairs.

Jan 02, 2016

Download

Documents

Annabel King
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: CNS: Anatomy and Physiology Dr. Milind Kothari Professor of Neurology Assoc Dean Student Affairs.

CNS: Anatomy and Physiology

Dr. Milind KothariProfessor of Neurology

Assoc Dean Student Affairs

Page 2: CNS: Anatomy and Physiology Dr. Milind Kothari Professor of Neurology Assoc Dean Student Affairs.

Two Anatomical Divisions – Central nervous system (CNS)

• Brain• Spinal cord

– Peripheral nervous system (PNS)• All the neural tissue outside CNS• Afferent division (sensory input)• Efferent division (motor output)

– Somatic nervous system– Autonomic nervous system

General Organization of the nervous system

Page 3: CNS: Anatomy and Physiology Dr. Milind Kothari Professor of Neurology Assoc Dean Student Affairs.

General Organization of the nervous system

Brain & spinal cord

Page 4: CNS: Anatomy and Physiology Dr. Milind Kothari Professor of Neurology Assoc Dean Student Affairs.

Why is this so hard?

• Multiple anatomies• Embryological• Lobes• Vascular anatomy• Neurochemical anatomy

• 3 dimensional• Structures with multiple names • Sometimes left is right and sometimes left is

left

Page 5: CNS: Anatomy and Physiology Dr. Milind Kothari Professor of Neurology Assoc Dean Student Affairs.

Principal CNS regions

Telencephalon

Diencephalon

Brainstem• Midbrain• Pons• Medulla

Spinal cord

Cerebellum

Page 6: CNS: Anatomy and Physiology Dr. Milind Kothari Professor of Neurology Assoc Dean Student Affairs.

31 spinal levels: 8 cervical 12 thoracic 5 lumbar 5 sacral 1 coccygeal

The bones of the skull & vertebrae dictate the name of the underlying CNS

Principal CNS regions

Page 7: CNS: Anatomy and Physiology Dr. Milind Kothari Professor of Neurology Assoc Dean Student Affairs.

Frontal Parietal

Temporal

Occipital

Principal CNS regions

Page 8: CNS: Anatomy and Physiology Dr. Milind Kothari Professor of Neurology Assoc Dean Student Affairs.

These named structures provide critical reference points for learning region-specific function as well as localizing a diagnosis…

…they also permit a significant expansion of the cortical surface area.

The paired cerebral cortices are covered by named sulci and gyri.

Telencephalon

Page 9: CNS: Anatomy and Physiology Dr. Milind Kothari Professor of Neurology Assoc Dean Student Affairs.

• Midbrain• Pons• Medulla

Brainstem

Page 10: CNS: Anatomy and Physiology Dr. Milind Kothari Professor of Neurology Assoc Dean Student Affairs.

Diencephalon, Brainstem & Cerebellum

Page 11: CNS: Anatomy and Physiology Dr. Milind Kothari Professor of Neurology Assoc Dean Student Affairs.

15

Page 12: CNS: Anatomy and Physiology Dr. Milind Kothari Professor of Neurology Assoc Dean Student Affairs.

CNS Structures

• Lobes• Cortex• Ventricles• Subcortical structures• Brainstem• Spinal Cord

Page 13: CNS: Anatomy and Physiology Dr. Milind Kothari Professor of Neurology Assoc Dean Student Affairs.

Central Nervous System– CNS: brain and spinal cord– Necessary for the maintenance of homeostasis– Contains 1011 neurons– Contains 1014 synapses– Responsible for everything we perceive, do, feel,

and think

Page 14: CNS: Anatomy and Physiology Dr. Milind Kothari Professor of Neurology Assoc Dean Student Affairs.

Histology of neural tissue

Two types of neural cells in the nervous system:

Neurons - For processing, transfer, and storage of information

Neuroglia – For support, regulation & protection of neurons

Page 15: CNS: Anatomy and Physiology Dr. Milind Kothari Professor of Neurology Assoc Dean Student Affairs.

Glial Cells– 90% of CNS composed of glia– Five types of glial cells

• Astrocyte—numerous functions• Ependymal cells—line cavities• Microglia—phagocytes• Oligodendrocytes—form myelin• Schwann cells (located in PNS)—form myelin

Page 16: CNS: Anatomy and Physiology Dr. Milind Kothari Professor of Neurology Assoc Dean Student Affairs.

Glial Cells

Page 17: CNS: Anatomy and Physiology Dr. Milind Kothari Professor of Neurology Assoc Dean Student Affairs.

Astrocytes– Development of neural connections– Possibly modulate synaptic activity– Remove neurotransmitter from synaptic cleft– Communicate to neurons through chemical

messengers– Protect neurons against toxic substances

and oxidative stress

Page 18: CNS: Anatomy and Physiology Dr. Milind Kothari Professor of Neurology Assoc Dean Student Affairs.

Microglia– Protect CNS from foreign matter through

phagocytosis• Bacteria• Dead or injured cells

– Protect CNS from oxidative stress

Page 19: CNS: Anatomy and Physiology Dr. Milind Kothari Professor of Neurology Assoc Dean Student Affairs.

CNS: Physical Support

Page 20: CNS: Anatomy and Physiology Dr. Milind Kothari Professor of Neurology Assoc Dean Student Affairs.

Cerebrospinal Fluid (CSF)– Extracellular fluid of the CNS– Secreted by ependymal cells of the

choroid plexus• Circulates to subarachnoid space and ventricles• Reabsorbed by arachnoid villi

– Functions• Cushions brain • Maintains stable interstitial fluid environment

Page 21: CNS: Anatomy and Physiology Dr. Milind Kothari Professor of Neurology Assoc Dean Student Affairs.

Cerebral Spinal Fluid

Page 22: CNS: Anatomy and Physiology Dr. Milind Kothari Professor of Neurology Assoc Dean Student Affairs.

CSF Production– Total volume of CSF = 125–150 mL– Choroid plexus produces 400–500 mL/day– Recycled three times a day

Page 23: CNS: Anatomy and Physiology Dr. Milind Kothari Professor of Neurology Assoc Dean Student Affairs.

Blood Supply to the CNS– CNS comprises 2% of body weight (3–4 pounds)

• Receives 15% of blood supply

– High metabolic rate• Brain uses 20% of oxygen consumed by body

at rest• Brain uses 50% of glucose consumed by body

at rest

– Depends on blood flow for energy

Page 24: CNS: Anatomy and Physiology Dr. Milind Kothari Professor of Neurology Assoc Dean Student Affairs.

CNS: Gray and White Matter

Page 25: CNS: Anatomy and Physiology Dr. Milind Kothari Professor of Neurology Assoc Dean Student Affairs.

White Matter in Brain

– Projection fibers• Cerebral cortex with lower levels of brain or spinal cord

– Association fibers • Connect two areas of cerebral cortex on same

side of brain

– Commissural fibers • Connect same cortical regions on two sides of brain

– Corpus callosum • Primary location of commissural fibers

Page 26: CNS: Anatomy and Physiology Dr. Milind Kothari Professor of Neurology Assoc Dean Student Affairs.

CNS: Gray and White Matter

Page 27: CNS: Anatomy and Physiology Dr. Milind Kothari Professor of Neurology Assoc Dean Student Affairs.

Brain

Page 28: CNS: Anatomy and Physiology Dr. Milind Kothari Professor of Neurology Assoc Dean Student Affairs.

Midbrain

Spinal cordPons

Medulla oblongata

Forebrain

Cerebrum

Thalamus

Hypothalamus

Pituitary gland

Brainstem

Diencephalon

Cerebellum

Corpus callosum

(c) Midsagittal section

Brain: Midsagittal View

Page 29: CNS: Anatomy and Physiology Dr. Milind Kothari Professor of Neurology Assoc Dean Student Affairs.

Premotor cortex(coordinatesvoluntarymovements)

Primary somatosensorycortex (somesthetic sensationsand proprioception)

Sensory associationareas (integration ofsensory information)

Primary motor cortex(voluntary movement)

Central sulcus

Prefrontalassociationareas (idea andplan for voluntarymovement, thoughts,personality)

Broca’s area(speech formation)

Limbic associationcortex (emotions,learning, and memory)

Olfactory cortex(smell)

Visual associationareas (higher visionprocessing)

Wernicke’s area(languagecomprehension)

Auditoryassociationareas

Primary auditorycortex (hearing)

Primary visual cortex(vision)

Functional Areas of Cerebrum

Page 30: CNS: Anatomy and Physiology Dr. Milind Kothari Professor of Neurology Assoc Dean Student Affairs.

Topographical Organization: Motor

Page 31: CNS: Anatomy and Physiology Dr. Milind Kothari Professor of Neurology Assoc Dean Student Affairs.

Topographical Organization: Sensory

Page 32: CNS: Anatomy and Physiology Dr. Milind Kothari Professor of Neurology Assoc Dean Student Affairs.

Imaging

• CT• MRI

Page 33: CNS: Anatomy and Physiology Dr. Milind Kothari Professor of Neurology Assoc Dean Student Affairs.

Advantages of CT

• cost• availability• decreased scan time• decreased sensitivity to patient motion• better visualization of acute blood• better visualization of bony abnormalities

Page 34: CNS: Anatomy and Physiology Dr. Milind Kothari Professor of Neurology Assoc Dean Student Affairs.

Computerized Tomography

Brain window

Bone window

Page 35: CNS: Anatomy and Physiology Dr. Milind Kothari Professor of Neurology Assoc Dean Student Affairs.

Advantages of MRI

• no ionizing radiation (peds & pregnant) • direct coronal, sagittal and transverse images• excellent contrast resolution• no interference from bony structures

Page 36: CNS: Anatomy and Physiology Dr. Milind Kothari Professor of Neurology Assoc Dean Student Affairs.

Axial view

Page 37: CNS: Anatomy and Physiology Dr. Milind Kothari Professor of Neurology Assoc Dean Student Affairs.

Coronal View

Page 38: CNS: Anatomy and Physiology Dr. Milind Kothari Professor of Neurology Assoc Dean Student Affairs.

Sagittal view

Page 39: CNS: Anatomy and Physiology Dr. Milind Kothari Professor of Neurology Assoc Dean Student Affairs.

Questions?