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SHLD500 Neuroanatomy for the SpeechLanguage Pathologist

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Title: SHLD500 Neuroanatomy for the SpeechLanguage Pathologist


1
SHLD500 Neuroanatomy for the Speech-Language
Pathologist

2
I. Organization of the Nervous System
  • The nervous system is the bodys principal
    control and integrating center.
  • It serves three broad functions sensory,
    integrative, and motor.
  • It senses changes within the body and in the
    outside environment.
  • It interprets the change.
  • It responds to the interpretation by initiating
    action by muscular contraction or glandular
    secretion.
  • Through sensation, integration, and response, the
    nervous system rapidly maintains the bodys
    homeostasis.

3
A. Divisions of the Nervous System
  • The nervous system has two principal divisions
  • the central nervous system (CNS) and
  • the peripheral nervous system (PNS).

4
1. The Central Nervous System
  • The CNS is command central for the entire
    nervous system.
  • It consists of the brain and the spinal cord.

5
1. The Central Nervous System Brain
  • The term brain comes from the old Anglo-Saxon
    word braegen which means the center of the
    nervous system.
  • In Greek, the word enkephalos pertains to the
    mass of nerve tissue housed within the bony
    confines of the head and provides the root word
    encephalon.
  • The brain is responsible for higher level human
    functions such as reasoning and language.

6
1. The Central Nervous System Brain
  • The brain is one of the bodys largest organs,
    weighing about three pounds.
  • It is mushroom-shaped and is divided into four
    principal parts the brainstem, the diencephalon,
    the cerebrum, and the cerebellum.

7
1. The Central Nervous System Brain
  • The brainstem is like the stalk of the mushroom.
  • The lower end is continuous with the spinal cord.
  • As it ascends from the spinal cord, it has three
    divisions the medulla oblongata, the pons, and
    the midbrain.

8
1. The Central Nervous System Brain
  • Above the brainstem, the diencephalon consists
    primarily of the thalamus and hypothalamus.
  • The cerebrum spreads over the diencephalon,
    constituting about 7/8 of the total brain, and
    occupying most to the cranium.

9
1. The Central Nervous System Brain
  • Below the cerebrum and behind the brainstem is
    the cerebellum.

10
1.The Central Nervous System Spinal Cord
  • The spinal cord begins as a continuation of the
    medulla from where it exits the cranium at the
    foramen magnum of the occipital bone.

11
1.The Central Nervous System Spinal Cord
  • It continues for approximately 16-18 to end at
    the level of the upper border of the second
    lumbar vertebra.

12
1.The Central Nervous System Spinal Cord
  • The cord serves as a conduit for the ascending
    and descending fiber tracts that connect the
    peripheral and spinal nerves with the brain.
  • It is functionally segmented into 31 sections,
    which each give rise to a pair of spinal nerves.

13
1.The Central Nervous System Spinal Cord
  • The adult spinal cord is about 1 in
    circumference, except in the mid-cervical and
    mid-lumbar regions where it is slightly larger.
  • The superior enlargement is termed the cervical
    enlargement.
  • It extends from C4 to T1.
  • Nerves serving the upper extremities arise from
    this area of the spinal cord.
  • The inferior enlargement is termed the lumbar
    enlargement, extending from T9-T12.
  • Nerves serving the lower extremities arise from
    this area of the spinal cord.

14
1.The Central Nervous System Spinal Cord
  • Below the lumbar enlargement, the spinal cord
    tapers off between L1 and L2 into a conical
    portion known as the conus medullaris.

15
1.The Central Nervous System Spinal Cord
  • From the conus medullaris, the filum terminale, a
    non-nervous fibrous tissue, extends to attach to
    the coccyx.
  • Nerves arising from the lower portion of the cord
    must angle inferiorly in the vertebral canal
    before leaving it.

16
1.The Central Nervous System Spinal Cord
  • Because it looks likes wisps of coarse hair
    flowing from the end of the cord, it is aptly
    named cauda equinahorses tail.

17
2.The Peripheral Nervous System
  • The PNS consists of all nervous tissue found
    outside of the bony confines of the skull and
    vertebral column.
  • The PNS serves the communication link between the
    body and the CNS.
  • The PNS connects the brain and spinal cord with
    receptors, muscles, and glands.
  • The PNS is broadly divided into spinal and
    cranial nerves.

18
2.The Peripheral Nervous System
  • There are direct connections between the brain
    and the cranial nerves, and the spinal cord and
    the spinal nerves.
  • The PNS is also divided into afferent and
    efferent systems.
  • The afferent system consists of nerve cells that
    convey information from receptors in the
    periphery of the body to the CNS.
  • The efferent system consists of nerve cells that
    convey information from the CNS to skeletal
    muscles and glands.

19
2.The Peripheral Nervous System Spinal Nerves
  • There are 31 pairs of spinal nerves named and
    numbered according to the region and the level of
    the spinal cord from which they emerge.
  • There are eight pairs of cervical nerves, 12
    pairs of thoracic nerves, 5 pairs of lumbar
    nerves, 5 pairs of sacral nerves, and 1 coccygeal
    spinal nerve pair.

20
2.The Peripheral Nervous System Spinal Nerves
  • C1 emerges between the occipital bone and the
    atlas.
  • All other spinal nerves leave the vertebral
    column from the intervertebral foramina between
    the adjoining vertebrae.

21
2.The Peripheral Nervous System Spinal Nerves
  • Each spinal nerve as two points of attachments or
    roots.
  • The posterior root contains the sensory fibers.
  • The anterior root contains the motor fibers.

22
2.The Peripheral Nervous System Spinal Nerves
  • Peripheral nerves to and from the spinal cord
    segregate their sensory and motor neurons.
  • Sensory neurons enter the cord dorsally, through
    the dorsal or posterior root.
  • Motor neurons leave the cord ventrally, through
    the ventral or anterior root.
  • Then the sensory and motor components fuse
    together to form the peripheral nerve.

23
2.The Peripheral Nervous System Spinal Nerves
  • This principlethat the dorsal nerve root is only
    sensory and the ventral nerve root only motoris
    named the Bell-Magendie Law for Sir Charles Bell
    and Francois Magendie who first stated it.
  • The spinal nerves act on visceral or somatic
    structures.
  • The functional component of a given spinal nerve
    fits one of four categories.

24
2.The Peripheral Nervous System Spinal Nerves
  • General somatic afferent nerves convey
    information about pain, temperature, and
    mechanical stimuli from receptors in the skin,
    muscles, and joints.
  • General visceral afferent nerves convey
    information from receptors in visceral
    structures, e.g., walls of the digestive tract.
  • General visceral efferent nerves convey
    information to an autonomic nerve fiber.
  • General somatic efferent nerves convey
    information to a skeletal.

25
2.The Peripheral Nervous System Cranial Nerves
  • There are 12 pairs of cranial nerves.
  • All pairs leave the cranium through the foramina
    of the skull.
  • They are designated with Roman numerals and
    names.
  • The Roman numerals indicate the level at which
    the nerve arises from the brain.
  • The name indicates the nerve distribution or
    function.

26
2.The Peripheral Nervous System Cranial Nerves
  • I-Olfactory II-Optic
  • IIIOculomotor IV-Trochlear
  • V-Trigeminal VI-Abducens
  • VII-Facial
  • VIII-Vestibulocochlear
  • IX-Glossopharyngeal
  • X-Vagus
  • XI-Accessory
  • XII-Hypoglossal

27
2.The Peripheral Nervous System Cranial Nerves
  • Based on the functional components of each nerve,
    there are three types of cranial nerves
  • Somatic efferent nerves (III, IV, VI, XII)
    contain mostly fibers innervating skeletal
    musculature.
  • Special sensory nerves (I, II, VIII) contain
    fibers relating to the special senses of sight,
    smell and taste, and hearing and equilibrium.
  • Branchiomeric nerves (V, VII, IX, X, XI) contain
    special visceral efferents that innervate the
    striated muscles of the larynx, pharynx, and face.

28
3.The Autonomic Nervous System (ANS)
  • The ANS is a unique component of the PNS.
  • It regulates the activities of smooth muscles,
    cardiac muscle, and certain glands.
  • Through its afferents and efferents, the ANS
    automatically and involuntarily regulates
    visceral activities, such as pupillary size
    change, lens accommodation, dilation of blood
    vessels, adjustments to the rate and force of
    heartbeat, movements of the GI tract, and most
    glandular secretions.

29
3.The Autonomic Nervous System (ANS)
  • The three subdivisions of the ANS include
  • The enteric subdivision
  • The sympathetic subdivision and
  • The parasympathetic subdivision.
  • The enteric nervous system consists of two
    interconnected plexuses of sensory neurons,
    interneurons, and visceral motor neurons, in the
    walls of the alimentary canal.
  • The enteric nervous system coordinates gut
    motility.

30
3.The Autonomic Nervous System (ANS)
  • The sympathetic nervous system prepares us for
    situations in which energy needs to be expended.
  • Its the bodys alerting system.
  • It increases our heart rate, decreases
    peristaltic actions, and diverts blood from the
    gut to the skeletal muscles.
  • The parasympathetic nervous system has a calming
    effect on bodily function by decreasing heart
    rate and blood pressure, increasing intestinal
    peristalsis and salivation, and opening
    sphincters.

31
3.The Autonomic Nervous System (ANS)
  • The parasympathetic nervous system enhances
    energy storage through conservation and
    restoration.
  • Both the sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous
    systems work with the endocrine system to
    maintain the stability of the bodys internal
    environment.

32
B. Embryological Levels of the Brain
  • The brain develops very rapidly during the first
    few years of life.
  • Growth is mainly due to an increase in the size
    of cells already present, proliferation and
    growth of neuroglia, development of synaptic
    contacts and dendritic branching, and myelination
    of various fiber tracts.

33
B. Embryological Levels of the Brain
  • 1. Development of the CNS and PNS
  •  The development of the NS begins at about the
    third week of life with a thickening of the
    ectoderm of the neural plate.

34
B. Embryological Levels of the Brain
  • 1. Development of the CNS and PNS
  •  The plate folds inward and forms a longitudinal
    groove, called the neural groove.
  • The raised edges of the neural plate are called
    neural folds.

35
B. Embryological Levels of the Brain
  • Development of the CNS and PNS
  • As development continues, the folds increase in
    height, meet, and form a tube, the neural tube.

36
B. Embryological Levels of the Brain
  • The neural tube forms first in the region that
    will become the cervical area and then closes
    like a zipper with progression passing both
    caudally and cranially.
  • The opening at the cranial end is called the
    anterior neuropore.
  • The opening at the caudal end is called the
    posterior neuropore.
  • Closure of the anterior neuropore takes place by
    day 24 and the posterior neuropore by day 26.

37
B. Embryological Levels of the Brain
  • The primitive CNS is now a hollow tubular
    structure closed at both ends.
  • The fluid filled cavity of this tube is called
    the neural canal which will develop into the
    ventricular system of the brain and the central
    canal of the spinal cord.
  • If the cranial portion of the neural tube fails
    to close, the result is anacephaly, and the
    overall structure of the brain is grossly
    disturbed.
  • If the posterior neuropore fails to close, the
    result is spina bifida.

38
B. Embryological Levels of the Brain
  • 2. Development of the Cerebral Vesicles
  • By the fourth week, three distinct bulges, the
    primary vesicles, appear in the anterior
    neuropore.
  • From the top down, we have the prosencephalon
    (forebrain), the mesencephalon (midbrain), and
    the rhombencephalon (hindbrain).

39
B. Embryological Levels of the Brain
  • By the fifth week, five secondary vesicles
    develop.
  • The prosencephalon divides into the two
    telecephalon, which become the cerebral
    hemispheres of the brain, and the single
    diencephalon, which gives rise to the thalamus
    and hypothalamus.

40
B. Embryological Levels of the Brain
  • The mesencephalon remains unchanged and becomes
    the midbrain.
  • The rhombencephalon divides into the
    metencephalon, which becomes the pons and
    cerebellum, and the myelencephalon, which becomes
    the medulla oblongata.

41
B. Embryological Levels of the Brain
  • In addition to the development of cerebral
    structures, the vesicles also give rise to the
    ventricular system.
  • Specifically, the prosencephalon develops the two
    lateral ventricles contained within the two
    cerebral hemispheres.

42
B. Embryological Levels of the Brain
  • The third ventricle develops within the
    diencephalon.
  • The mesencephalon gives rise to the cerebral
    aqueduct.
  • The rhombencephalon gives rise to the fourth
    ventricle.

43
B. Embryological Levels of the Brain
  • The ventricles are a continuous series of
    fluid-filled spaces extending through all major
    divisions of the CNS.
  • Each lateral ventricle communicates with the 3rd
    ventricle through the intraventricular foramen.
  • The 3rd ventricle communicates with the 4th
    ventricle through the cerebral aqueduct of the
    midbrain.

44
B. Embryological Levels of the Brain
  • Production of the cerebral spinal fluid filling
    the ventricles is manufactured by small vascular
    tufts called the choroid plexus.
  • The choroid plexus are found in the roof of the
    3rd and 4th ventricles.
  • The choroid plexus of the 3rd ventricle protrude
    into the lateral ventricle.

45
B. Embryological Levels of the Brain
  • Neurulation is the process that establishes the
    central nervous system.
  • As seen in cross section, the embryonic neural
    tube forms three layers, from neurocoel (neural
    canal) outward these are the ependymal layer, the
    mantle layer, and the marginal layer.

46
B. Embryological Levels of the Brain
  • Some of the cells of the ependymal layer remain
    in place to become the thin, ciliated lining of
    the adult central canal, but most migrate outward
    to join mantle cells in forming both neurons and
    neuroglia.
  • These will be the gray matter of the adult.

47
B. Embryological Levels of the Brain
  • With cell migration, the mantle layer develops
    the characteristic butterfly shape.
  • The lateral walls of the tube thicken and
    maturing neurons clump into two different plates.

48
B. Embryological Levels of the Brain
  • The two plates are divided by a shallow,
    longitudinal groove called the sulcus limitans.
  • The sulcus limitans separates the developing gray
    matter into a dorsal alar plate and a ventral
    basal plate.

49
B. Embryological Levels of the Brain
  • These plates signal the future locations of
    sensory and motor functions, respectively.
  • Alar and basal plates become dorsal and ventral
    horns, respectively, while intermediate regions
    develop interneurons, mixed nerves.

50
B. Embryological Levels of the Brain
  • Finally, cells from the marginal layer mature by
    growing out their processes (axons and
    dendrites).
  • This layer is penetrated by nerve fibers growing
    out of the deeper layers.
  • It becomes the white matter of the adult cord.

51
B. Embryological Levels of the Brain
  • The brainstem develops in a manner similar to the
    spinal cord.
  • From the medulla through the midbrain, alar and
    basal plates form motor and sensory columns of
    cells that supply cranial nerves.
  • However, the organization of alar and basal
    plates in the brainstem differ from those of the
    spinal cord.

52
B. Embryological Levels of the Brain
  • In the 6 mm embryo, the thin ependymal roof of
    the neural tube, the spinal cord, becomes even
    thinner as the ventricle of the neural tube
    begins to widen in the early stages of the
    development of the 4th ventricle.
  • With continued development, alar and basal plates
    shift laterally and become located in the floor
    of the ventricle.

53
B. Embryological Levels of the Brain
  • The sulcus limitans continues to be identifiable
    helping to mark the boundary between sensory and
    motor areas.
  • In the medulla and pons, the alar plate comes to
    lie lateral to the basal plate, not dorsal to it.
  • The basal plate forms the motor nuclei of the
    cranial nerves, medial to the sulcus limitans in
    the ventricular floor.

54
B. Embryological Levels of the Brain
  • Lateral to the sulcus, the alar plate forms
    sensory relay nuclei.
  • Rostral to the midbrain, the diencephalon and
    cerebral hemispheres develop from the alar plate.
  • The cerebellum also develops from alar plate.
  • Portions of the alar plate migrate ventrally and
    form the inferior olivary nucleus, a cerebellar
    relay nucleus.
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