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Neuro Quiz
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144
Health Care
Graduate
05/15/2009

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Term
cerebellum receives input from vestibular system via which peduncle and to what part of the cerebellum does it end?
Definition
inferior peduncle, vestibulocerebellum
Term
cerebellum receives input from muscle afferents in the spinal cord via which peduncle and which area of the cerebellum does it end?
Definition
inferior peduncle, spinocerebellum
Term
cerebellum receives input from somatic sensory and motor areas of cerebral cortex via which peduncle? and where does it end?
Definition
via middle peduncle; cerebrocerebellum
Term
cerebellum receives 3 return signals. from what? and via which peduncles?
Definition
vestibular system via inferior; spinal cord via superior as relayed via reticular formation; motor cortex via superior as relayed via thalamus
Term
what are the 3 cerebellar deep nuclei?
Definition
dentate nucleus, interpositus nucleus, and fastigial nucleus
Term
ventral lateral nucleus of thalamus projects to?
Definition
area 4, primary motor cortex
Term
ventral posterior nucleus of thalamus projects to?
Definition
areas 3, 1, 2, primary somatic sensory cortex
Term
ventral anterior nucleus of thalamus projects to?
Definition
connects basal ganglia system to the premotor areas
Term
as a whole, the basal ganglia are functionally involved in?
Definition
initiation and suppression of movement
Term
what 4 specific thalamic nuclei project to and receive from areas of association cortex?
Definition
lateral posterior, pulvinar, dorsomedial, and anterior (tubercle)
Term
what do the lateral posterior nucleus and pulvinar connect?
Definition
pretectum/superior colliculus to the parietal and temporal lobe assoc. cortex - provide transthalamic routes for coritco-cortical communication
Term
what does the pretectum do?
Definition
controls the size of pupils, helps in measuring the size and motion of objects (approaching vs. receding etc)
Term
what does the superior colliculus do?
Definition
sends data to thalamus that helps in ID the location of objects in space, uses visual, auditory and somtaic sensory input to change the direction of gaze
Term
dorsomedial nucleus - where does it receive input from and where does it project to?
Definition
receives from basal ganglia, amygdala; projects to prefrontal association cortex
Term
where does the anterior nucleus of the thalamus project to? where does it receive in put?
Definition
receives subcortical input from mammillary bodies via mammillo-thalamic tract and subcortical input from subdivisions of the limbic lobe including hippocampus; projects to "limbic lobe" (runs thru cingulate gyrus)
Term
what are the 3 parts of the subthalamus?
Definition
thalamic reticular nucleus, subthalamic nucleus, zona incerta
Term
describe the interaction b/w subthalamic nucleus and globus pallidus.
Definition
globus pallidus externa projects into subthalamic nucleus (via axons passing across the internal capsule) and the globus pallidus internus receives return input from subthalamic nucleus
Term
where could i find the nuclei for CN III?
Definition
close to the midline, just ventral to the cerebral aqueduct at the transverse level of the superior colliculus. fibers travel ventrally thru tegmentum to emerge in the medial walls of the interpeduncular fossa
Term
where could i find the nucleus for CN IV?
Definition
nucleus close to midline right below the CN III nucleus, close to midline, just ventral to cerebral aqueduct at the transverse level of the inferior colliculus - fibers sent DORSALLY to emerge @ lower border of inferior colliculus
Term
where could i find the nucleus for VI?
Definition
close to midline in the pontine tegmentum, emerges ventrally below the lower border of the pons, along lateral border of the pyramids
Term
where could i find the nucleus for CN XII?
Definition
(long strip) close to midline @ dorsal side of medullary tegmentum extending from upper end of open medulla to the lower level of the closed medulla. fibers emerge in pre-olivary sulcus
Term
where could i find the nucleus for CN V?
Definition
in pontine tegmentum, around same level as CN VI, but more laterally displaced and much closer to ventral side of tegmentum. fibers emerge on lateral side of ventral pons (thick)
Term
where could i find the nucleus for CN VII?
Definition
in pontine tegmentum below the nucleus for CN V, also laterally displaced and close to the ventral side of the tegmentum. fibers emerge sub-pons just laterally to CN VI
Term
where could i find the nucleus for CN IX, X, XI?
Definition
(long) @ same transverse level as nucleus for XII except more laterally displaced and slightly more ventral. fibers emerge in post-olivary sulcus
Term
what 5 things are controlled by reticular formation?
Definition
arousal and wakefulness, spinal cord reflexes, coordinated eye movements, cardiovascular reflexes, respiratory center
Term
where are acoustic tubercles found and what do they house?
Definition
at lateral end of stria medullaris of the IVth ventricle (near foramen of luschka), house dorsal cochlear nuclei
Term
what are the 3 parts of substantia nigra?
Definition
pars compacta, pars reticularis, ventral tegmental area (far medially and ventrally, belongs to the limbic system, has fibers running up to pre-frontal region of cerebral cortex)
Term
what is the solitary tract of V?
Definition
travels w/the spinal tract of V, is the internal continuation of the taste fibers and thoracic/abdominal afferents if VII, IX, and X
Term
striatum receives major input from? and projects to?
Definition
input from cerebral cortex, dorsal thalamus, and substantia nigra; output to globus pallidus and substantia nigra
Term
what cells are the only source of cholinergic innervation to the hippocampal complex?
Definition
septal gray
Term
what is the basal nucleus of Meynert?
Definition
part of anterior perforated substance, projects to cerebral cortex, uses AcH as neurotransmitter - undergoes degeneration in Alzeimer's dementia (only source of cholinergic axons to neocortex)
Term
what is the diagonal band of broca?
Definition
collection of cholinergic neurons running along medial border of anterior perforated space, send axons to olfactory bulb
Term
hippocampus can be divided into 3 parts
Definition
dentate gyrus, hippocampus, and subiculum
Term
what's degenerated in parkinson's disease?
Definition
pars compacta (secretes dopamine)
Term
cyotoskeleton of neuron has microfilaments, structure?
Definition
double stranded helix of actin monomers concentrated in periphery of cell
Term
cytoskeleton of neuron has neurofilaments, structure/proteins?
Definition
24 twisted monomers of cytokeratin - present throughout neuron particularly in axon
Term
cytoskeleton has microtubules. structure? proteins?
Definition
polarized helical tube formed of alpha and beta tubulin subunits. present throughout cell, esp in axons - in cell body and dendrites poles organized at random. in axon, + ends are all pointed away from soma
Term
2 ways myelin increases conduction velocity
Definition
1. increases resistance of membrane --> decreases local circuit current leakage --> allows current to depolarize at a greater distance

2. decreases capacitance that must be charged as depolarization occurs in the axon membrane ahead of the propagating AP
Term
axo-dendritic synapses are often what?
Definition
excitatory (glutamatergic); gray type 1 (more pre- and esp more post-synaptic density "asymmetrical" densities are partly microfilaments); large active zone, round vesicles, wide cleft
Term
axo-somatic synapse is often?
Definition
inhibitory (GABAergic); gray type II (small active zone, flat vesicles, narrow cleft, less pre and postsynaptic density "symmetrical"
Term
describe the 3 transport systems present in the BBB.
Definition
1. GLUT1 - transports glu into brain, not insulin-sensitive

2. AA carrier sys - carries leu, phe, and other AA & L-DOPA - uses facilitated diffusion

3. A system (small AA system) - active transport sys uses Na gradient to pump Gly out of brain - separate transport sys for basic, acidic, monocarboxylic and other AA
Term
whats the significance of the arachnoid layer?
Definition
has tight junctions blocking free diffusion between brain and other tissues of the body (barrier b/w ECF and CSF)
Term
one type of sensory mechanism: site of channels sensitive to adequate stimulus and site of AP generation on same cell. where does this mechanism occur?
Definition
free nerve endings in skin, paccincian corpuscles, muscle spindles, golgi tendon organs, joint receptors, baroreceptors, osmoreceptors, all of which are mechanically sensitive. and temp results in skin and ant hyp
Term
mechanism of sensation: channels sensitive to mechanical deformation are in one cell and AP are generated in another cell. where does this happen?
Definition
some cutaneous receptors, all auditory and vestibular receptors
Term
sensory mechanism: chemicals affect a transmembrane receptor (G protein-mediated). where does this mechanism occuR?
Definition
1. some sensory receptor cells can generate AP themselves (olfaction)

2. others release synaptic transmitters affecting other neurons that generate AP (taste, paO2, paCO2)
Term
describe the 4th sensory mechanism (for eyes)
Definition
photons activate photopigments --> activates transducers --> activates PDE --> hydrolyzes GTP --> closes Na channels --> hyperpolarization --> decreased transmitter release --> decreased rate of AP firing
Term
Ia afferents are _____ while II are ____?
Definition
Ia are fast adapting and slow adapting; II do not adapt at all
Term
what induces exocytosis of neurotransmitter vesicles?
Definition
increased [Ca] comes into presynaptic terminal and binds to synaptotagmin in release site complex and triggers it
Term
what causes EPSPs (depolarizations of postsynaptic membrane) in neurons?
Definition
increases in both gNa and gK with a reversal potential near zero; OR solely due to a decrease in gK
Term
what causes IPSPs (hyperpolarizations of postsynaptic neuron)?
Definition
increases in gCl and/or gK
Term
whats the diff b/w ionotropic receptors and metabotropic receptors?
Definition
ionotropic = fast, ligand-gated channels; metabotropic = slow, g-protein mediated may affect channels indirectly thru second messengers like cAMP etc
Term
what are some examples of glutamatergic ionotropic receptors?
Definition
AMPA, kainate, and NMDA
Term
excitatory synapses tend to be located on what part of neuron?
Definition
dendrites or spines that emerge on dendrites, rarely cell body
Term
how does inhibition work with GABA and Gly?
Definition
gaba-a and gly receptors open a channel that has selective conductance to chloride --> small hyperpolarization --> IPSP (gaba-b are metabotropic, same mechanism, just takes longer)
Term
inhibitory synapses tend to be located on what part of neuron?
Definition
cell body (often but not always)
Term
extensive dopaminergic innervation in what 2 areas of cns? and what discrete nuclei gave rise to this?
Definition
striatum & frontal lobe of cortex; from substantia nigra and ventral tegmentum
Term
extensive norepi distribution in cns, origin?
Definition
locus ceruleus
Term
peptides have diverse functions in cns. what are opioids involved in?
Definition
pain control (enkephalin, b-endorphin, dynorphpin) natural analgesics/spinal cord, central gray, midbrain)
Term
peptide hormone substance p does what?
Definition
involved in transmission of pain/primary sensory afferents)
Term
what is the rate limiting step in dopamine synthesis? and what are the details of this step
Definition
tyrosine hydroxylase - converts l-tyrosine to l-dopa. oxidation reaction - uses oxygen and requires pteridine cofactor (reoxidized by pteridine reductase)
Term
what affects TH enzyme activity?
Definition
substrate concentration, concentration of end product inhibitor
Term
what does dopamine decarboxylase do and where is it?
Definition
converts dopamine to NE, located in membrane and cytosol of storage vesicles themselves
Term
for catecholamines how is rate of NT synthesis coupled to rate of release? (3 ways)
Definition
1. can exacerbate signal by blocking reuptake

2. increase synthesis of NE by removal of negative feedback (NE and dopa) on Tyrosine hydroxylase or allosterically activating TH (buildup of presynaptic cAMP and TH becomes allosterically modified so TH has greater affinity for tyr and reduced affinity for endproduct inhibitors)

3. induce synthesis of new TH and DBH molecules (this is long term adaptation)
Term
broadly speaking, what 2 events in a synapse are regulated by Ca?
Definition
release of the vesicle from cytoskeleton and fusion of the vesicle with plasma membrane
Term
how is Ca involved in releasing vesicles from the cytoskeleton?
Definition
vesicle encased in synapsin, which binds to actin cytoskeleton, inhibiting vesicle movement. CAM kinase is a protein inside the vesicle that has synapsin tail sitting on it. Ca comes in --> CAM kinase activated to phosphorylate synapsin --> synapsin dissociates from vesicle and breaks apart from actin --> vesicle free to move around
Term
how is Ca involved in helping vesicles fuse w/membrane?
Definition
synaptotagmin is located near Ca channel --> Ca rushes in --> synaptotagmin senses local increase in Ca and this influences its ability to facilitate diffusion of 2 separate lipid membranes
Term
what structures are included in allocortex?
Definition
cingulate gyrus, parahippocamal gyrus, uncus, olfactory cortex, olfactory bulb (paleocortex= base of telencephalon; archicortex= hippocampus)
Term
what are the 6 layers of lamination in neuronal cell types and what kind of cells do they mostly have in them?
Definition
1. molecular layer (cell-poor neuropil)

2. external granular (small pyramidal)

3. external pyramidal (medium pyramidal)

4. internal granular (small non-pyramidal)

5. internal pyramidal (large pyramidal)

6. multiform (large non-pyramidal, fusiform-shaped modified-pyramidal cells)
Term
principal neurons/projection neurons are mostly located in which layers? while interneurons or short axon cells populate which layers?
Definition
2, 3, 5, 6 (make up 80% of cortex); 2, 3, 4, 5 (20%)
Term
all short axon cells are inhibitory (use GABA) except what one kind of cell?
Definition
spiny stellate cell - uses glutamate
Term
which cortical layer receives input from thalamus?
Definition
4
Term
which cortical layer sends output to subcortical structures other than thalamus?
Definition
5
Term
which cortical layer sends output to thalamus?
Definition
6
Term
where do afferents from specific thalamic nuclei end (layer)?
Definition
end as dense arborization in layer 4
Term
where do fibers from non-specific thalamic nuclei end (what layer)?
Definition
terminate diffusely along their course, mostly in layer 6
Term
where do afferents from other cortical areas (association axons and commissural axons) end? (layer)
Definition
terminate diffusely along their course mostly in layers 2 and 3
Term
what layer(s) of the cortex are the major source of cortico-cortical fibers?
Definition
II and III
Term
what is the basic 3 layer structure of allocortex?
Definition
1. molecular layer (cell poor neuropil)

2. principal cell layer (pyramidal cells)

3. multiform/polymorphic layer (non-pyramidal cells)
Term
damage to brocas area vs wernickes area
Definition
brocas area damage --> expressive aphasia (can comprehend but cannot express)

wernickes area damage --> receptive aphasia (can talk, but it doesnt make sense and they don't comprehend...lose their language)
Term
interruption of anterior cerebral blood flow can cause what?
Definition
contralateral hemiplegia (paralysis of the lower limbs
Term
occlusion of middle cerebral artery would cause?
Definition
contralateral hemiplegia most marked in upper extremities and face, aphasia when its the left hemisphere
Term
posterior cerebral arteries end in which 2 arteries/
Definition
calcarine and parietooccipital aa.
Term
which artery travels with CN VII and VIII?
Definition
interanl auditory a
Term
which a supplies the flocculus?
Definition
anterior inferior cerebllar a (also supplies ant and inf cerebellar hemispheres,middle cerebellar peduncle, and choroid plexus of IV)
Term
what does recurrent a of huebner supply?
Definition
comes off ant cerebral artery (aka medial striate artery) and supplies rostro-medial head of caudate, putamen, ant limb of internal capsule
Term
what aa supplies sup and inf colliculi?
Definition
quadrigeminal branch of posterior cerebral arter
Term
whats the anastomotic pathway called in the spinal cord?
Definition
arterial vasocorona
Term
where do medial striate aa come from and what do they supply?
Definition
branch off of anterior cerebral aa. and supply rostromedial head of caudate, putamen, and anterior portion of internal capsule
Term
where do anteromedial branches come from and what do they supply?
Definition
come from anterior cerebral arteries and pass thru anterior perforated space to supply parts of anterior hypothalamus, preoptic and supra chiasmic regions
Term
where do lateral striates originate and what do they supply?
Definition
they are central branches of middle cerebral artery, pass thru anterior perforated space to supply cuadate, putamen, internal capsule, and globus pallidus
Term
where do anterior choroidal aa originate and what do they supply?
Definition
branch of the ICA, travels along optic tract, enters inf horn of lat ventricle via choroid fissure, supplies choroid plexus of inf horn, optic tract, uncus, amygdala, hippocampus, ventral globus pallidus, tail of caudate, retrolenticular and sublenticular portions of internal capsule (prone to thrombosis)
Term
where do posteromedial branches originate and what do they supply?
Definition
come from posterior communicating aa and posterior cerebral aa, pass thru posterior perforated space, supply hypophysis, infundibulum, tuber cinerum, mammillary bodies, interpeduncular fossa, ant and med thalamus, subthalamic regions, midbrain tegmentum
Term
where do posterolateral/thalamogeniculate aa originate and waht do they supply?
Definition
posterior cerebral aa, supply posterior portion of thalamus, pulvinar, lateral nuclei of thalamus, LGB and MGB
Term
where does posterior choroidal art originate and what does it supply?
Definition
posterior cerebral artery: medial branch supplies choroid plexus of 3rd ventricle, atrium of lat ventricles, sup and med nuclei of thalamus, pineal, parts of midbrain tectum; lateral branch anastamoses with ant choroidal art to supply choroid plexus of 4th ventricle
Term
what protein do we test for to check for defects i neural tube closure?
Definition
alpha fetoprotein
Term
what are the 4 types of spina bifida?
Definition
occulta (lack of vertebral arch fusion, cord still in vertebra); meningocoele (cord still in cavity but meninges outpocketing); myelomeningocele (meninges AND cord outpocketing); myeloschisis (neural tube never fused)
Term
what forms the inferior olivary nucleus?
Definition
gray matter from alar plates!
Term
what structures are derived from the alar plate?
Definition
nucleus cuneatus, nucleus gracilis, spinal nucleus of V, trigeminal nuclei, vestibulo-cochlear nuclei, tectum
Term
what structures are derived from the basal plate?
Definition
dorsal motor nuclei, ventral motor nuclei, hypoglossal nuclei, abducens nuclei, oculomotor nuclei
Term
where is the cerebellum from developmentally?
Definition
forms from the rhombic lip which is an alar plate derivative
Term
where is the corpus striatum from developmentally?
Definition
ganglionic eminence (--> amygdala, putamen, caudate)
Term
where is globus pallidus from developmentally?
Definition
neurons from diencephalon migrate laterally to form it.
Term
neuronal development in brainstem (nuclei organization): where do you find the older neurons vs newer ones?
Definition
outside-inside pattern of neuronal development (new ones more medial, old ones more lateral)
Term
neuronal development in cerebral cortex (laminar organization): where do you find the old vs new ones?
Definition
inside-outside sequence of generation: younger cells closer to pia, older cells closer to neuroepithelium
Term
what does the Hes gene do and what happens when its inhibited?
Definition
Hes genes delay the differentiation of neuronal precursor cells into neurons --> increase in pool of precursor cells (by proliferation). inhibition of Hes --> premature differentiation of neuroblasts and depletion of the neuronal pool, absence of late born neurons
Term
where do projection neurons and local circuit neurons come from? (what layer)
Definition
projection neurons come from ventricular/subventricular zone; local circuit neurons 65% come from vz/svz, 35% come from ganglionic eminence
Term
what is reelin?
Definition
gene, that when turned on, inhibits the default pathway to creating CR neurons and induces neurons to differentiate into neurons of other layers. when this gene is off, layers will all be of CR neurons, no differentiation into other types
Term
describe the role of bmp and shh in dorsal ventral polarity establishment.
Definition
default pathway is to form a neural tube, this pathway is inhibited by BMP, so SHH inhibits an inhibitor. (notocord produces SHH and ectoderm produces BMP. BMP ends up in roof plate, SHH induced in floor plate)
Term
what determines the differentiation of neurons into diff types in the ventral spinal cord?
Definition
interaction of the diff concentrations of SHH with the transcription factors that are expressed in diff types of neurons (ie ones closer to floor plate --> exposed to higher levels of SHH --> motor neurons)
Term
oligodendrocytes develop in region of ____ SHH while astrocytes develop in area of ____ SHH
Definition
high, low
Term
neuromeres: one defines the isthmus (between mes and met) and is associated with?
Definition
trochlear nerve
Term
the six neuromeres of the rhombencephalon regulate what?
Definition
rostro-caudal level of generation of the cranial nerve nuclei
Term
what does the 4th prosomere do?
Definition
a. derives the hypothalamus b. derives the cerebral hemispheres c. derives the retina
Term
what does the 3rd prosomere derive?
Definition
ventral thalamus/subthalamus
Term
what does the 2nd prosomere derive?
Definition
dorsal and epi thalamus
Term
what does the 1st prosomere derive?
Definition
pretectum
Term
where are the 4 organizing centers in the developing neural system?
Definition
b/w 2nd and 3rd prosomeres, b/w 1st prosomere and mesencephalon; between mesencephalon and isthmus; b/w myelencephalon and spinal cord
Term
what do hox genes do?
Definition
help establish apico-caudal polarity in hindbrain and spinal cord (mutations alter the position of cranial nerves or prevents their formation) expression of diff hox genes specifies which CN nuclei is going to form in the brainstem
Term
what is the lamina terminalis derived from embryologically?
Definition
anterior neuropore
Term
what is GFAP (glial fibrillary acidic protein)?
Definition
neural stem cells generate neurons first then glial cells. the promoter region of glial specific genes (GFAP) are silenced (highly methylated) in neural stem cells during early dev, making the cells refractory to inductive signals for astrocyte dev). as dev proceeds, GFAP demethylated and neural stem cells can become astrocytes
Term
defects in neuronal migration initiation (i.e. periventricular heterotopia) associated with what cause?
Definition
mutations that disrupt cytoskeletal associated proteins
Term
defects in ongoing neuronal migration (i.e. lissencephaly) are associated with what cause?
Definition
mutations in microtubule-associated proteins
Term
defects in signals that stop migration (i.e. cobblestone lissencephaly) are associated with what causes?
Definition
alterations in protein glycosylation
Term
why are cortical dysplasias epileptic?
Definition
cortical dysplasia = abn dev of columnar clones; derived from ventricular zone but lack component from ganglionic eminence (therefore neurons are glutaminergic and highly epileptic)
Term
while hox genes determine apico-caudal polarity in rhombencephalon, what establishes this polarity in the mesencephalon?
Definition
3 organizing centers (mes/met boundary (MHB_, floor plate, anterior neural ridge. these centers est. an epigenic grid and neural and glial progenitors assume distinct fates according to this grid (i.e. dopaminergic neurons rostral to mhb and serotoninergic neurons caudal to it)
Term
what is the zona limitans intrathalamica?
Definition
separates the dorsal thalamus from the subthalamus, is one example of an organizing center present in the prosencephalon to help establish apico-caudal polarity
Term
what proteins in the EC matrix interact w/the receptor cells on the growth cone? (and what is the receptor cell)
Definition
receptor cell = integrins. integrins interact with collagen, laminin, fibronectin
Term
cell surface adhesion (bw growth cone and target tissue) mediated by what 2 groups of cells?
Definition
cadherins (req ca), and cell adhesion molecules (CAM) do not req ca
Term
what is netrin?
Definition
attractant for commisural axons in the ventral floor plate. (is a chemoattractant along with SHH)
Term
what is an ex of a chemorepellent?
Definition
bone morphogenic factors
Term
describe the slit/nectin system
Definition
slit binds to receptor robo1 and acts as chemorepellent. robo3 blocks robo1 action --> slit cannot bind --> netrin receptor activated--> axon starts to cross midline--> once crossed, robo1/chemorepellent activated again so axon moves away
Term
what process are WNTs involved in?
Definition
migration of commissural axons from posterior to anterior (of the floor plate/ventral) more WNT4 in anterior than post (gradient) and axons move twd higher gradient of WNT4
Term
explain the chemoaffinity theory. (ephrin)
Definition
in axonal migration: there are signals in both the axon and the target organ that specify where synapses are going to form. so must be a chemical match b/w axon and target

in retina there is ephrin receptor and in tectum there is ephrin ligand. very high levels of ligand inhibit axonal migration, so receptors from post-retina (high levels of receptor) migrate to tectum w/low levels of ephrin ligand
Term
how do clusters of neurons like column of terni, lateral motor column, and medial motor column form?
Definition
cell bodies of motor neurons projecting to a single muscle are clustered in a longitudinal column of the spinal cord via expression of specific cadherins in the neuronal surface. and clusters are grouped into longer columns.
Term
motor neurons in the column of terni project to?
Definition
sympathetic ganglia
Term
motor neurons in the lateral motor column project to?
Definition
dorsal muscles in the limb area
Term
neurons in the medial motor column project to?
Definition
ventral musculature in limb areas
Term
what is the basis for the target specificity of columns like column of terni, lateral motor column and medial motor column?
Definition
targets of motor neurons are specified before axons extend into periphery prob has to do with combination of TF, particularly of the Lim and Hox family, expressed in neurons. these factors prob encode for specific ephrin receptors that bind to ephrin ligands in the muscles (ephrin receptors on axons and ephrin ligands on target tissue, remember frog retina)
Term
alzheimers is histologically defined by 2 pathologies
Definition
amyloid plaques (extracellular deposits consisting mainly of aggregated b-amyloid peptide) and neurofibrillary tangles (intracellular deposits consisting of hyperphosophorylated tau protein - result in neuronal death
Term
what is the substantia gelatinosa?
Definition
in the anterior spino-thalamic pathway, pain fibers thought to use substance P as a NT synapse superficially in the dorsal horn in an area called substantia gelatinosa
Term
the collaterals given off by the spino thalamic tract on its ascent into thalamus go to 3 places
Definition
lateral reticular formation, deep layers of tectum, midbrain central gray
Term
spino-thalamic tract terminates in 3 sets of thalamic nuclei. they are?
Definition
VPL nucleus, intralaminar nuclei, part of the posterior nuclear group (Po)
Term
brodman's areas that represent deep sensations?
Definition
3a, 2
Term
brodman's areas that represent cutaneous sensation
Definition
3b, 1
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