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Spinal ganglia, their structure and functional importance.

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Title: Spinal ganglia, their structure and functional importance.


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  • Spinal ganglia, their structure and functional
    importance.

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Part I Spinal cord
  • 1. Organization
  • - General
  • - Cauda equina
  • - Meninges
  • 2. Structure
  • Grey matter
  • White matter
  • 3. Blood supply
  • 4. Spinal nerves
  • Typical n.
  • Components

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1. Organization
  • Cauda equina
  • Meninges

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2. Structure Grey matter
  • Components Nerve cells, Processes, Neuroglia,
    Blood vessels
  • Grey columns Anterior, Posterior, Transverse,
    Lateral

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Gray Matter
  • Posterior horns contain
  • interneurons.
  • Anterior horns contain some
  • interneurons as well as the cell
  • bodies of motor neurons.
  • These cell bodies project their axons via the
    ventral roots of the spinal cord to the skeletal
    muscles.
  • The amount of ventral gray matter at a given
    level of the spinal cord is proportional to the
    amount of skeletal muscle innervated.

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Gray Matter
  • Lateral horn neurons are sympathetic motor
    neurons serving visceral organs.
  • Their axons also exit via the ventral root.
  • Afferent sensory fibers carrying info from
    peripheral receptors form the dorsal roots of the
    spinal cord. The somata of these sensory fibers
    are found in an enlargement known as a dorsal
    root ganglion.
  • The dorsal and ventral roots fuse to form spinal
    nerves.

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Grey columns
  • Anterior
  • Medial group skeletal muscles of the neck and
    trunk
  • Central group cervical and lumbosacral segments
    contains the phrenic, asccessory and
    lumbosacral nuclei
  • Lateral group cervical and lumbosacral areas
    innervating skeletal muscles of the limbs
  • Posterior
  • Substantia gelatinosa concerned with pain,
    temperature and touch
  • Nucleus proprius fibers from white posterior
    column associated with proprioception, 2-piont
    discrimination and vibration
  • Nucleus dorsalis (Clarks column) from C8 L3/4
    proprioceptive endings in spindles
  • Visceral afferent nucleus from T1 L3 receives
    visceral afferent information

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Grey columns (cont.)
  • Transverse
  • Contains central canal that starts in the MO,
  • Inferiorly expands in the conus medullaris as the
    terminal ventricle CSF ependyma
  • Lateral
  • From T1L2/3
  • Give rise to preganglionic
    sympathetic fibers
  • Similar group in S2-4 give rise to preganglionic
    parasympathtic fibres

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2. Structure White matter
  • Mixture of myelinated nerve fibers, neuroglia and
    blood vessels
  • Ascending tracts
  • Descending tracts
  • Ascending and descending tracts with the same
    origin, course and termination Fasciculus
  • Intersegmental tracts

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White Matter
  • Myelinated nerve fibers.
  • Allows for communication btwn the brain and
    spinal cord or btwn different regions of the
    spinal cord.
  • White matter on each side of the cord is divided
    into columns or funiculi.
  • Typically, they are ascending or descending.
  • What does that mean?

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Ascending tracts
  • Sensory, contain 1st, 2nd and 3rd order neurons
  • Pathways for temperature, pain, proprioception
  • Examples Spinothalamic tract (lateral
    anterior, fasciculus gracilis and cuneatus)
    Spinocerebellar tract (anterior posterior)
    Cuneocerebellat tract.
  • Other Spinotectal, spinoreticular,
    spino-olivary, visceral sensory

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Descending tracts
  • White matter from the supraspinal centers with
    1st, 2nd and 3rd order motor neurons
  • Examples Corticospinal, reticularspinal,
    tectospinal, rubrospinal, vestibulospinal,
    olivospinal, descending autonomic

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3. Blood supply Spinal arteries
  • From vertebral, posterior intercostal, lumbar,
    lateral sacral, ascending cervical, deep
    cervical, iliolumbar aa.
  • Posterior spinal a. in close association to
    posterior spinal roots, but is insufficient to
    supply the spinal cord alone
  • Anterior spinal a. unite to for a single artery
    on the median fissure of the spinal cord.

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Spinal arteries (cont.)
  • Radicular a. reinforce the spinal arteries by
    entering through the intervertebral foramina
  • Larger anterior radicular arteries A.
    radicularis magna (artery of Adamkiewicz) from
    the left an intersegmental branch of the
    descending aorta, that supplies 2/3rds of the
    spinal cord

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3. Blood supply Venous drainage
  • Internal (anterior posterior) venous plexus
  • External venous plexus (anterior posterior)
  • Basivertebral and intervertebral veins.

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4. Typical spinal nerve
  • Posterior (dorsal) root Supplies synovial joints
    of the vertebral column, deep muscles of the back
    overlying skin. Posterior root ganglia
    Sensory, unipolar with satellite cells.
  • Anterior (ventral) root Supplies the remaining
    areas anterior lateral regions of the trunk
    and limbs

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What brainstem structures are visible here?
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Reticular Formation
  • Extensive network of neurons that runs thru the
    medulla and projects to thalamic nuclei that
    influence large areas of the cerebral cortex.
  • Midbrain portion of RAS most likely is its center
  • Functions as a net or filter for sensory input.
  • Filter out repetitive stimuli. Such as?
  • Allows passage of infrequent or important stimuli
    to reach the cerebral cortex.
  • Unless inhibited by other brain regions, it
    activates the cerebral cortex keeping it alert
    and awake.

How might the sleep centers of your brain work?
Why does alcohol make you tired?
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Protection
  • What is the major protection for the brain?
  • There are also 3 connective tissue membranes
    called the meninges
  • Cover and protect the CNS
  • Protect blood vessels
  • Contain cerebrospinal fluid
  • The 3 meninges from superficial to deep
  • Dura mater
  • Arachnoid mater
  • Pia mater

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Skin
Galea Aponeurotica
Connective Tissue
Bone
Dura Mater
Arachnoid mater
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Spinal Cord
  • Functions to transmit messages to and from the
    brain (white matter) and to serve as a reflex
    center (gray matter).
  • Tube of neural tissue continuous w/ the medulla
    at the base of the brain and extends about 17 to
    just below the last rib. (Ends at L1)
  • Majority of the SC has the diameter of your thumb
  • Thicker at the neck and end of the cord (cervical
    and lumbar enlargements) b/c of the large group
    of nerves connecting these regions of the cord w/
    the arms and legs.

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Spinal Cord
  • Surrounded by a single
  • layered dura mater
  • and arachnoid and pia mater.
  • Terminates in cone shaped
  • structure called the conus medullaris.
  • The filum terminale, a fibrous extension of the
    pia mater, extends to the posterior surface of
    the coccyx to anchor the spinal cord.
  • The cord does not extend the entire length of the
    vertebral column so a group of nerves leaves
    the inferior spinal cord and extends downward.
    It resembles a horses tail and is called the
    cauda equina.

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Spinal Cord
  • Notice the gross features of the spinal cord on
    the right.
  • 31 pairs of spinal nerves attach to the cord by
    paired roots and exit from the vertebral canal
    via the intervertebral foramina.

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  • Resembles a butterfly.
  • 2 lateral gray masses connected by the gray
  • commissure.
  • Posterior projections are the posterior or dorsal
    horns.
  • Anterior projections are the anterior or ventral
    horns.
  • In the thoracic and lumbar cord, there also exist
    lateral horns.

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Spinal Nerves
  • 31 nerves connecting the spinal cord and various
    body regions.
  • 8 paired cervical nerves
  • 12 paired thoracic nerves
  • 5 paired lumbar nerves
  • 5 paired sacral nerves
  • 1 pair of coccygeal nerves

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Spinal Nerves
  • Each connects to the spinal cord by 2 roots
    dorsal and ventral.
  • Each root forms from a series of rootlets that
    attach along the whole length of the spinal cord
    segment.
  • Ventral roots are motor while dorsal roots are
    sensory.

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Spinal Nerves
  • The 2 roots join to form a spinal nerve prior to
    exiting the vertebral column.
  • Roots are short and horizontal in the cervical
    and thoracic regions while they are longer and
    more horizontal in the sacral and lumbar regions.
  • Almost immediately after emerging from its
    intervertebral foramen, a spinal nerve will
    divide into a dorsal ramus, a ventral ramus, and
    a meningeal branch that reenters and innervates
    the meninges and associated blood vessels.

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  • Each ramus is mixed.
  • Joined to the base of the ventral rami of spinal
    nerves in the thoracic region are the rami
    communicantes. These are sympathetic fibers that
    well deal with shortly.
  • Dorsal rami supply the posterior body trunk
    whereas the thicker ventral rami supply the rest
    of the body trunk and the limbs.

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Thank you for attention !
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