Chapter 18 The Spinal Cord - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Chapter 18 The Spinal Cord

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Title: Chapter 18 The Spinal Cord


1
Chapter 18The Spinal Cord Spinal Nerves
  • Together with brain forms the CNS
  • Functions
  • spinal cord reflexes
  • integration (summation of inhibitory and
    excitatory) nerve impulses
  • highway for upward and downward travel of sensory
    and motor information

2
Spinal Cord Protection
By the vertebral column, meninges, cerebrospinal
fluid, and vertebral ligaments.
3
Structures Covering the Spinal Cord
  • Vertebrae
  • Epidural space filled with fat
  • Dura mater
  • dense irregular CT tube
  • Subdural space filled with interstitial fluid
  • Arachnoid spider web of collagen fibers
  • Subarachnoid space CSF
  • Pia mater
  • thin layer covers BV
  • denticulate ligs hold in place

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5
External Anatomy of Spinal Cord
  • Flattened cylinder
  • 16-18 Inches long 3/4 inch diameter
  • In adult ends at L2
  • In newborn ends at L4
  • Growth of cord stops at age 5
  • Cervical enlargement
  • upper limbs
  • Lumbar enlargement
  • lower limbs

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7
Inferior End of Spinal Cord
  • Conus medullaris
  • Filum terminale
  • cone-shaped end of spinal cord
  • thread-like extension of pia mater
  • stabilizes spinal cord in canal
  • Caudae equinae (horses tail)
  • dorsal ventral roots of lowest spinal nerves
  • Spinal segment
  • area of cord from which each pair of spinal
    nerves arises

8
Spinal Cord Spinal Nerves
  • Spinal nerves begin as roots
  • Dorsal or posterior root is incoming sensory
    fibers
  • dorsal root ganglion (swelling) cell bodies of
    sensory nerves
  • Ventral or anterior root is outgoing motor fibers

9
Gray Matter of the Spinal Cord
  • Gray matter is shaped like the letter H or a
    butterfly
  • contains neuron cell bodies, unmyelinated axons
    dendrites
  • paired dorsal and ventral gray horns
  • lateral horns only present in thoracic spinal
    cord
  • gray commissure crosses the midline
  • Central canal continuous with 4th ventricle of
    brain

10
White Matter of the Spinal Cord
  • White matter covers gray matter
  • Anterior median fissure deeper than Posterior
    median sulcus
  • Anterior, Lateral and Posterior White Columns
    contain axons that form ascending descending
    tracts

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12
Tracts of the Spinal Cord
  • Function of tracts
  • highway for sensory motor information
  • sensory tracts ascend
  • motor tracts descend
  • Naming of tracts
  • indicates position direction of signal
  • example anterior spinothalamic tract
  • impulses travel from spinal cord towards brain
    (thalamus)
  • found in anterior part of spinal cord

13
Location of Tracts inside Cord
  • Motor tracts Sensory tracts
  • pyramidal tract (corticospinal) ---spinothalamic
    tract
  • extrapyramidal tract ---posterior column

  • ---spinocerebellar

14
Function of Spinal Tracts
  • Spinothalamic tract
  • pain, temperature, deep pressure crude touch
  • Posterior columns
  • proprioception, discriminative touch, two-point
    discrimination, pressure and vibration
  • Direct pathways (corticospinal corticobulbar)
  • precise, voluntary movements
  • Indirect pathways (rubrospinal, vestibulospinal)
  • programming automatic movements, posture muscle
    tone, equilibrium coordination of visual
    reflexes

15
Spinal Reflexes
  • Automatic response to change in environment
  • Integration center for spinal reflexes is gray
    matter of spinal cord
  • Examples
  • somatic reflexes result in skeletal muscle
    contraction
  • autonomic (visceral) reflexes involve smooth
    cardiac muscle and glands.
  • heart rate, respiration, digestion, urination,
    etc
  • Note cranial reflexes involve cranial nerves

16
Reflex Arc
  • Specific nerve impulse pathway
  • 5 components of reflex arc
  • receptor
  • sensory neuron
  • integrating center
  • motor neuron
  • effector
  • 4 important somatic spinal reflexes
  • stretch, tendon, flexor(withdrawal) crossed
    extensor reflexes

17
Stretch Reflex (patellar reflex)
  • Monosynaptic,ipsilateral reflex arc
  • Prevents injury from over stretching because
    muscle contracts when it is stretched
  • Events of stretch reflex
  • muscle spindle signals stretch of muscle
  • motor neuron activated muscle contracts
  • Brain sets muscle spindle sensitivity as it sets
    muscle tone (degree of muscle contraction at
    rest)
  • Reciprocal innervation (polysynaptic-
    interneuron)
  • antagonistic muscles relax as part of reflex

18
Illustration of the Stretch Reflex
19
Flexor (withdrawal) Reflex
  • Step on tack (pain fibers send signal to spinal
    cord
  • Interneurons branch to different spinal cord
    segments
  • Motor fibers in several segments are activated
  • More than one muscle group activated to lift foot
    off of tack

20
Crossed Extensor Reflex
  • Lifting left foot requires extension of right leg
    to maintain ones balance
  • Pain signals cross to opposite spinal cord
  • Contralateral extensor muscles are stimulated by
    interneurons to hold up the body weight
  • Reciprocal innervation - when extensors contract
    flexors relax, etc

21
Spinal Nerves
  • 31 Pairs of spinal nerves
  • Named numbered by the cord level of their
    origin
  • 8 pairs of cervical nerves (C1 to C8)
  • 12 pairs of thoracic nerves (T1 to T12)
  • 5 pairs of lumbar nerves (L1 to L5)
  • 5 pairs of sacral nerves (S1 to S5)
  • 1 pair of coccygeal nerves
  • Mixed sensory motor nerves

22
Connective Tissue Coverings
  • Endoneurium wrapping of each nerve fibers
  • Perineurium surrounds group of nerve fibers
    forming a fascicle
  • Epineurium covering of entire nerve
  • dura mater blends into it at intervertebral
    foramen

23
Endoneurium Perineurium Epineurium
24
Branching of Spinal Nerve
  • Spinal nerves formed from dorsal ventral roots
  • Spinal nerves branch into dorsal ventral rami
  • dorsal rami supply skin muscles of back
  • ventral rami form plexus supply anterior trunk
    limbs
  • meningeal branches supply meninges, vertebrae
    BV

25
A Nerve Plexus
  • Joining of ventral rami of spinal nerves to form
    nerve networks or plexuses
  • Found in neck, arm, low back sacral regions
  • No plexus in thoracic region
  • intercostal nn. innervate intercostal spaces
  • T7 to T12 supply abdominal wall as well

26
Cervical Plexus
  • Ventral rami of spinal nerves (C1 to C5)
  • Supplies parts of head, neck shoulders
  • Phrenic nerve (C3-C5) keeps diaphragm alive
  • Damage to cord above C3 causes respiratory arrest

27
Phrenic Nerve
28
Brachial Plexus
  • Ventral rami from C5 to T1
  • Supplies shoulder upper limb
  • Passes superior to 1st rib under clavicle
  • Axillary n. deltoid teres m.
  • Musculocutaneous n. elbow flexors
  • Radial n. shoulder elbow extensors
  • Median ulnar nn. flexors of wrist hand

29
Branches off Brachial Plexus
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31
Clinical Correlations
  • Erb-Duchene palsy
  • waiters tip position
  • fall on shoulder
  • Radial nerve injury
  • improper deltoid injectionor tight cast
  • wrist drop
  • Median nerve injury
  • numb palm fingers inability to pronate flex
    fingers
  • Ulnar nerve injury (clawhand)
  • inability to adduct/abduct fingers, atrophy of
    interosseus
  • Long thoracic nerve injury (winged scapula)
  • paralysis of serratus anterior, cant abduct
    above horizontal

32
Lumbar Plexus
  • Ventral rami of L1 to L4
  • Supplies abdominal wall, external genitals
    anterior/medial thigh
  • Injury to femoral nerve causes inability to
    extend leg loss of sensation in thigh
  • Injury to obturator nerve causes paralysis of
    thigh adductors

33
Branches of Lumbar Plexus
  • Notice Femoral and Obturator nerves
  • Found anterior and medial to hip joint

34
Sciatic Nerve Branches
  • Notice Common Peroneal nerve and Tibial nerve
    behind the knee
  • Notice Sciatica pain extends from the buttock
    down the leg to the foot
  • may be sign of herniated disc

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36
Sacral Plexus
  • Ventral rami of L4-L5 S1-S4
  • Anterior to the sacrum
  • Supplies buttocks, perineum part of lower limb
  • Sciatic nerve L4 to S3 supplies post thigh
    all below knee
  • Peroneal nerve injury produces foot drop or
    numbness
  • Tibial nerve injury produces calcaneovalgus (loss
    of function on anterior leg dorsum of foot)

37
Branches of Sacral Plexus
  • Notice Sciatic nerve origins
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