Title: The Neurological System: Anatomy and Physiology of the CNS
1The Neurological SystemAnatomy and Physiology
of the CNS
- NET 2420
- Lecture Handout
- S.Compton, RN, MSN
2Anatomy of Nervous System
- CNS-central nervous system
- Brain
- Spinal Cord
- PNS-peripheral nervous system
- Cranial nerves I XII
- Spinal nerves C1-S5
- ANS-autonomic nervous system
- Sympathetic
- Parasympathetic
3Cells of Nervous System
- Two cell types
- Neuroglia
- 5-10 times more numerous than neurons
- Provide support, nourishment, protection to
neurons - Mitotic CAN replicate if damaged
- Neurons
- Primary functional unit of the nervous system
- Nonmitotic cannot replicate
4Neuroglia (glial cells)
- Most primary tumors arise from _____ cells
- Several types ? different functions
- Oligodendroglia produce _______ sheath (CNS)
(Schwann cells in PNS) - Astrocytes found primarily in gray matter
- Help form blood brain barrier
- Help form scar tissue when CNS injured
- Ependymal cells line brain ventricles
- Formation of _______________ _____________
5Neurons Structure
- Cell body
- Dendrites short processes extending from cell
body - Receive conduct impulses FROM other neurons
TOWARD cell body - Axon projects from cell body in varying lengths
- Carries impulses TO other neurons or end organs
6Nerve Impulses
- Action potential initiated?Transmitted along
axon? Reaches end of nerve fiber? transmitted
across synapse (junction) to another neuron or
receptor organ by means of neurotransmitters? - Result excitation or inhibition of action
potential - Myelin white lipid substance insulator for
conduction of impulses facilitates impulse - Peripheral nerve axons gaps in myelin called
Nodes of Ranvier - Action potential hops from node to node FASTER
7Synapse Essential Components
- Pre-synaptic terminal
- End of axon
- Contains vesicles with chemical neurotransmitters
- Synaptic cleft
- Microscopic space between neuron and receptor
cell - Receptor site
- Post-synaptic cell
8Neurotransmitters
- Hundreds of synapses may occur on single neuron
- NET effect of neurotransmitters released will
determine if impulse is excitatory or inhibitory - Neurotransmitters continue to combine at receptor
sites until they - Are inactivated by ____________
- Are taken back up by pre-synaptic endings
- Diffuse away from synapse
9Common Neurotransmitters
- Major neurotransmitters Table 60-1 p 1822
- Acetylcholine
- Major transmitter of parasympathetic nervous
system - Destroyed by acetylcholine esterase
- Cholinergic receptors stimulated by
acetylcholine - Muscarinic
- Nicotinic
- Norepinephrine
- Major transmitter for sympathetic nervous system
- Destroyed by
- Catechol-O-methyl transferase (PNS)
- Monoamine oxidase (CNS)
- Adrenergic receptors (a-1, a-2, B-1, B-2)
stimulated by norepinephrine, epinephrine, and
other catecholamines
10Examples
- _________ seratonin reuptake inhibitors
- Barbiturates and benzodiazepines
- Potentiate GABA, enhance GABA, derivatives of
GABA - _________ MAO inhibitors
- MAO degrades dopamine, MAOIs allow dopamine to
stay at receptor sites longer - Dopaminergic drugs (______________ disease)
- Levodopa-increase brain levels of dopamine
- Anti-psychotic drugs (Haldol)
- Block dopamine receptors, do not allow dopamine
to affect the limbic system? emotions
11CNS Level of Functioning
- Spinal Cord
- Lowest functioning level of CNS
- Automatic motor responses and reflexes
- Brain stem and subcortex (cerebellum and
diencephalon) - Second functional level
- Blood pressure, respirations, equilibrium, and
primitive emotions - Cortex
- Highest level
- Cognition, memory, thinking, abstraction
12Dominance of a Cerebral Hemisphere
- 90 have left hemispheric dominance? right handed
- Some left handed people are left dominant
- Each hemisphere receives sensory information from
and controls skeletal muscles of
__________________ side of body - Hemispheres communicate with each other, but each
hemisphere specializes in certain activities - Left side
- language, analysis, problem solving, reading,
writing, verbal communication - Right side
- perception of environment, music, art, nonverbal
communication and perception of spiritual
environment
13Frontal Lobe
- Concentration, abstract thought
- Affect, personality, inhibitions
- Information storage, memory
- Motor function
- Voluntary motor control
- Betz cells/ pyramidal cells
- Specific arrangement to body parts
- Voluntary eye movement control
- Motor control of speech in dominant hemisphere?
____________ area - Motor control of involuntary activities
- Respiration, BP, GI activity
14Parietal Lobe
- General sensation
- Primary sensory cortex arranged in correlation
to motor strip - Perception of touch, position, pressure,
vibration - Persons awareness of parts of body
(_______________) - Spatial perception and interrelationships
- Interprets sensory perceptions and sends
information to thalamus and cortex
15Temporal Lobe Occipital Lobe
- Primary auditory receptive area
- ________________ area Auditory association
- Interpretive area At junction of temporal,
parietal and frontal lobes - Visual, auditory and olfactory perception and
memory, learning, emotional affect
- Visual perception
- Visual association
- Some visual reflexes and involuntary eye
movements (smooth tracking of objects)
16Basal Ganglia (basal nuclei)
- Several masses of subcortical nuclei located deep
in cerebral hemispheres, just above thalamus - Like brakes in a car? control of movement
- Controls and facilitates learned and automatic
movements - Fine motor control, particularly of hands and
lower extremities
17Diencephalon Thalamus
- Egg shaped masses of gray matter lying ventro
medially in hemispheres - Major relay center for sensory and other afferent
input to cortex - Divided into groups of nuclei responsible for
various functions - Plays a role in conscious pain awareness,
consciousness, focusing attention, emotions,
among other vital functions - Helps control primitive responses
18Diencephalon Hypothalamus
- Located below thalamus
- Regulates ____________ and autonomic functions
- Controls
- Temperature monitors blood temp and sends
afferent impulses to sweat glands, muscles, etc - Water metabolism (_____)
- Hypophyseal secretion
- Visceral and somatic activities BP, HR,
peristalsis, etc - Visible physical emotional expression (blushing,
clammy hands)
19Internal Capsule
- Part of white matter of cerebrum
- The point at which fibers coming from various
portions of the cortex converge at brain stem and
enter thalamus-hypothalamus region - Crucial anatomical area
20Limbic System
- Located lateral to hypothalamus
- forms border around brain stem
- Made up of several structures
- Hippocampus, fornix, mammillary body, amagdala
- Controls biological rhythms, sexual behavior,
emotions of fear and rage - Helps balance extremes in emotion
- Essential for normal memory (hippocampus)
21Reticular Formation
- Nuclei from brainstem and portions of
diencephalon - Motor and sensory neurons providing information
about muscle activity - Continuous input to support body against gravity
- Vasomotor and respiratory control
22Reticular Activating System RAS
- Nuclei in spinal cord, brain stem, thalamus and
hypothalamus - Control sleep-wakefulness cycle, consciousness,
focused attention - Stimulation of brain stem portion will cause
wakefulness - Stimulation of thalamic portion adds cognition
and cerebral cortical activity
23Brainstem
- Midbrain nuclei for pupillary reflexes, eye
movements auditory reflexes - Pons Respiratory center, 4th ventricle,
reticular formation, nuclei of several cranial
nerves - Medulla rate and strength of heartbeat rate and
strength of respirations sneezing, sucking,
coughing, gagging, swallowing, vomiting, blood
vessel diameter
24Cerebellum
- Located in posterior cranial fossa
- Coordinates muscular activity so movements are
fluid - Position sense
- Coordinates agonist and antagonist muscles
- Maintains muscle tone and equilibrium
- Fine movement
- Balance
25Protective Structures
- Cranium portion of skull covering brain
- Composed of 8 bones
- Lobes named for bones they lie under
- Meninges
- Three layers of tissue
- Provide protection, support, and nourishment to
brain and spinal cord
26Dura Mater (Hard mother)
- Outermost layer
- 2 layers of inelastic membrane? space between
bone and dura is potential space called - ______________________ SPACE
- Falx cerebri between the two hemispheres
- Tentorium cerebelli between cerebrum and
cerebellum - Falx cerebelli between lobes of cerebellum
- Diaphragm sella over the sella tursica
(pituitary)
27Arachnoid Mater
- Thin, delicate, elastic layer, covers entire
brain - Houses blood vessels of different sizes
- Space between dura and arachnoid called
________________ SPACE - Pia Mater
- __________________________________________________
__________________________________________________
__________________________________________________
________ - Covers entire surface of brain, follows surface
folds - Space that separates arachnoid and pia called
_____________________ SPACE ? CSF flow
28Ventricular System
- 4 fluid filled cavities within brain connect
with each other and cord - 2 lateral ventricles
- Cerebral hemispheres
- Third ventricle
- Walls made up of thalamus and hypothalamus
- Fourth ventricle
- Lies between cerebellum and
- medulla and pons
29Cerebrospinal Fluid (CSF)
- Clear, colorless fluid found within brain
- Surrounds brain and spinal cord
- Functions
- Cushions brain
- Allows fluid shifts from cranial cavity to spinal
cavity - Carries nutrients
- Produced by choroid plexus specialized structure
in ventricles - Approximately 400 500 ml/day
- Reabsorbed at same rate by arachnoid villi
- Approximately 150 ml in ventricular /
subarachnoid system - Provides valuable diagnostic information
30Flow of CSF
- Low pressure system 9-14 mmHG
- Choroid plexus? lateral ventricles? Foramen of
Monro? Third Ventricle? Aqueduct of Sylvius?
Fourth Ventricle? several foramen? subarachnoid
space ? circulates around brain and spinal cord?
reabsorbed into venous circulation through the
arachnoid villi? protrusions of arachnoid
primarily in the sagittal sinus
31Cerebral Blood Flow
- Anteriorly internal carotid arteries
- Divide into anterior and middle cerebral arteries
- Anterior 3/5 cerebrum
- Posteriorly vertebral arteries? join to form
BASILAR artery - Divides at midbrain to form posterior cerebral
arteries - Posterior 2/5 of cerebrum cerebellum and
brainstem
32Cerebral Arteries
- Anterior Cerebral Artery
- Supplies anterior portion of brain frontal lobes
- Areas affected control thought, personality,
motor movement especially of leg - Middle Cerebral Artery
- Largest branch off internal carotid
- Areas affected sensory and motor for face,
throat, hand and arm - Dominant hemisphere motor speech receptive
speech - Most often occluded in stroke!!
33Circle of Willis
- Internal carotids branch
- 2 anterior cerebral arteries joined to each other
by anterior communicating artery - 2 posterior communicating arteries
- 2 posterior cerebral arteries
34Cerebral Venous Drainage
- Does NOT parallel its arterial supply
- Cerebellar and brain stem venous drainage DOES
parallel - Cerebral veins drain into dural sinuses formed
between dural layers? (superior sagittal sinus
transverse sinus) drain into internal jugular
veins - Decreased venous outflow can _____________
intracranial pressure
35Blood Brain Barrier
- Structure of CNS capillaries different
- Junctions between endothelial cells very tight
- Solutes and water must pass through endothelial
cells, NOT junctions - Astrocytes form transport system
- Oxygen, glucose, other nutrients allowed to
enter, waste products removed - Excludes water soluble and ionized large
molecules (most antibiotics) - Allows _________ soluble substances
- Affects penetration of pharmaceutical substances
- Altered by trauma, cerebral edema, cerebral
hypoxemia
36Vertebral Column and Spinal Cord
- 33 vertebrae (bones)
- 7 cervical
- 12 thoracic (each corresponds to a rib)
- 5 lumbar
- 5 sacral fused into one bone? sacrum
- 4 coccygeal fused into one bone? coccyx
37Spinal Cord
- Extension of the brain
- Contains white matter (nerve tracts) and grey
matter (cell bodies) - Covered with meninges bathed with CSF
- Carries sensory information TO and motor
information FROM brain - Cord actually extends from vertebral C1 to L1
- End of cord termed conus medullaris
- Thoracic nerves begin to elongate
- Lumbar and sacral nerves with very long roots
which bundle together to form CAUDA EQUINA
(horses tail)
38Spinal Cord
- Central H-shaped gray matter
- Dorsal (posterior) horns
- Sensory cell bodies and neuroglia
- Ventral (anterior) horns
- Motor neurons and neuroglia
- White matter- myelinated axons of sensory and
motor nerves
39Sensory PathwaysAfferent UP Spine to Brain
- ANTERO-LATERAL SPINOTHALAMIC TRACT
- Pain and temperature
- Neuron 1 enters DORSAL HORN and synapses with 2
- IMMEDIATELY decussates to opposite side travel up
to - THALAMUS? synapses with 3? postcentral gyrus
- POSTERIOR COLUMNS
- Tactile, pressure, vibration, proprioception
- Neuron 1 sensory neuron enters dorsal root
ganglia - Axon travels length of cord to MEDULLA where they
- Synapse with Neuron 2? decussates
- Enter THALAMUS? synapses with neuron 3 processed
to cortex
40Motor Pathways Voluntary
- Pyramidal (voluntary) or Extra-pyramidal
(involuntary) tracts - Older terms delineated motor tracts by how fibers
passed through pyramids of medulla - PYRAMIDAL (VOLUNTARY)
- Corticospinal, corticobulbar ? brain to cord
- Consists of two groups of neurons
- Upper motor neuron (UMN)
- Located in the motor cortex, cerebellum, brain
stem (CNS) - Lower motor neurons (LMN)
- Located in CNS and PNS
41Voluntary Motor Neurons
- UMN ? Impulses travel from MOTOR CORTEX, through
the INTERNAL CAPSULE? MEDULLA? DECUSSATION?SPINAL
CORD? ANTERIOR HORNS? synapse with LMN (lower
motor neuron)?SPINAL NERVES? peripheral muscle - Smeltzer Bare p 1832
- Table 60-4
- Comparison of UMN and LMN lesions
42Motor Pathways Involuntary
- EXTRA-PYRAMIDAL (INVOLUNTARY)
- Vestibulospinal, Reticulospinal, Rubrospinal
- Originate in midbrain, pons, medulla
- Impulses travel from UMN in pre-motor area? PONS?
DECUSSATION? down SPINAL CORD?ANTERIOR HORNS?
LMN? muscle - Autonomic nervous system activity smooth muscle
and glands - Integration of movements to maintain posture
43REFLEX Response
- Ability of nervous system to respond to stimuli
from environment without brain involvement - Simple reflex arc requires
- Stimulus? sensory neuron? dorsal root ganglion?
anterior horn? synapse with motor neuron? exits
spine by ventral root? effector muscle
44Reflex Response
45Reflex Responses
- Usual effect on the reflexes by UMN from the
cortex are INHIBITORY (overall effect) - If UMN are diseased, will see hyperactive
reflexes spasticity - If cord damage, may see hyperactive reflexes
below level of injury - Decreased or absent reflexes indicate a disorder
of the LMN or anterior horn of the spinal cord at
level of reflex
46Spinal Nerves
- Mixed Have an afferent (dorsal sensory) root and
an efferent (ventral motor) root - 31 pairs
- 8 cervical (C1-C8)
- 12 thoracic
- 5 lumbar, 5 sacral, 1 coccygeal
- Lumbosacral nerves ? very long roots travel down
vertebral column to exit at appropriate formina - Actual cord level stops at L1
47Spinal Nerves
- 8 cervical
- C1 exits above C1 vertebra
- C2 exits below C1 vertebra
- C3 exits below C2 vertebra or ABOVE C3
- C4 exits ABOVE C4
- C8 exits ABOVE T1
- Exit below the corresponding vertebrae
- 12 thoracic
- T1 Exits below T1
- 5 lumbar
- 5 sacral
48Nerve Plexus
- Spinal nerves split into anterior rami and
posterior rami - Anterior rami form plexi networks of nerve
fibers that branch into peripheral nerves - Brachial Plexus C5-C8, T1
- Arms, wrists, hands
- Lumbar plexus L2-L4
- Anterior lower body
- Sacral Plexus L5-S5
- Posterior lower body
49Dermatomes Specific areas of skin innervation
at various spinal cord segments
50Cranial Nerves
- 12 pairs (CN I XII)
- Transmit MOTOR or SENSORY or BOTH between brain
or brainstem and head and neck - ALL cranial nerves except for CN I and CN II exit
from the mid-brain, pons, or medulla - Table 60-2 p 1828
51Autonomic Nervous System
- Efferent System
- Ennervates all internal organs, smooth muscle,
glands - Carries messages from endocrine system and brain
stem - Two Major Divisions
- Sympathetic exit between T1 to L2 ?thoracolumbar
- Parasympathetic exit with cranial nerves from
mid-brain and medulla and with nerves from S2-S4
? craniosacral
52Pre-ganglionic and Post-ganglionic Neurons
- Neurons in the ANS synapse OUTSIDE of CNS in a
ganglion - Pre-ganglionic neuron leaves brainstem or spinal
cord area? myelinated axon travels to ganglia
where it synapses and releases acetylcholine - Postganglionic neuron cell body in ganglion?
UNMYELINATED axon leaves ganglion and travels to
effector tissue - Location of ganglion and neurotransmitter
released at effector tissue depends on whether it
is parasympathetic or sympathetic
53Sympathetic Nervous System
- Sympathetic ganglion near cord
- Sympathetic chain contain
- postganglionic neurons
- Some pre-ganglionic axons terminate at adrenal
medulla? epinephrine released - Physiologic effects FIGHT OR FLIGHT
- Increased BP, increased blood flow to skeletal
muscles, increased heart rate, increased
respiratory rate, bronchiolar dilatation,
pupillary dilatation - Primary neurotransmitter of POST-GANGLIONIC
neurons norepinephrine
54Parasympathetic Nervous System
- Physiologic effect Maintenance of body function
- Reduces HR, reduces contractility and
conductivity - Decreased RR, increased bronchiolar constriction
- Increased GI tone with sphincter relaxation
- Vasodilation of external genitalia
- Pupil constriction
- Table 60-3 p 1830
- Main neurotransmitter at both pre-ganglionic and
post-ganglionic synapses ACETYLCHOLINE