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The Brain

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Page 1: The Brain Spinal Cord – Mass of nerve tissue located in the vertebral canal – Extends from Medulla Oblongata to 2 nd lumbar vertebrae – Transmits electrical

The Brain

Page 2: The Brain Spinal Cord – Mass of nerve tissue located in the vertebral canal – Extends from Medulla Oblongata to 2 nd lumbar vertebrae – Transmits electrical

• Spinal Cord– Mass of nerve tissue located in the

vertebral canal– Extends from Medulla Oblongata to 2nd

lumbar vertebrae – Transmits electrical information to and

from the brain, limbs, trunk, and organs of the body

– Protected by ligaments, fat, meninges, and cerebral spinal fluid

• Spinal Nerves– Pathways of communication between

spinal cord and specific nerves of the PNS– Connects CNS to sensors, muscles, and

glands

The Spinal Cord

Page 3: The Brain Spinal Cord – Mass of nerve tissue located in the vertebral canal – Extends from Medulla Oblongata to 2 nd lumbar vertebrae – Transmits electrical

• Responsible for basic life functions: breathing, heartbeat, and blood pressure

• Part of the brain between the spinal cord and diencephalon

• Contains:– Midbrain– Pons– Medulla

The Brain Stem Basics

Page 4: The Brain Spinal Cord – Mass of nerve tissue located in the vertebral canal – Extends from Medulla Oblongata to 2 nd lumbar vertebrae – Transmits electrical

• Midbrain– Station for info that passes between

spinal cord and cerebrum or cerebellum and cerebrum

– Relays impulses for vision, hearing, and touch• Ex: eye movements and

startle reflex• Pons– Bridge that joins cerebellum

with cerebrum• Medulla (Oblongata)– Contains sensory and motor neurons– Regulates heart rate and breathing– Reflex for swallowing, vomiting,

coughing, sneezing, hiccupping

The Brain Stem Details

Page 5: The Brain Spinal Cord – Mass of nerve tissue located in the vertebral canal – Extends from Medulla Oblongata to 2 nd lumbar vertebrae – Transmits electrical

• Responsible for relaying sensory information between brain regions

• Connects structures of the endocrine system with the nervous system

• Contains:– Thalamus– Hypothalamus– Pineal Gland

The Diencephalon Basics

Page 6: The Brain Spinal Cord – Mass of nerve tissue located in the vertebral canal – Extends from Medulla Oblongata to 2 nd lumbar vertebrae – Transmits electrical

• Thalamus– Structure where all sensory

impulses (except smell) pass through

– Transmits motor information from cerebellum to cerebrum

• Hypothalamus– Regulates homeostasis

• Sleep, hunger thirst, temp, blood pressure, fluids, emotions, behavior, etc

• Pineal Gland– Apart of the endocrine system– Secretes melatonin

• Promotes sleepiness

The Diencephalon Details

Page 7: The Brain Spinal Cord – Mass of nerve tissue located in the vertebral canal – Extends from Medulla Oblongata to 2 nd lumbar vertebrae – Transmits electrical

This is your brain on cookies

Page 8: The Brain Spinal Cord – Mass of nerve tissue located in the vertebral canal – Extends from Medulla Oblongata to 2 nd lumbar vertebrae – Transmits electrical

• Divided into right and left hemispheres

• Connects to the brainstem

• Constantly receives sensory impulses

• Essential in coordinating movements so they appear skilled, smooth, and graceful, not stiff and jerky

• Maintains muscle tone, posture, balance

• Damage from trauma/disease disrupts muscle coordination

The Cerebellum

Page 9: The Brain Spinal Cord – Mass of nerve tissue located in the vertebral canal – Extends from Medulla Oblongata to 2 nd lumbar vertebrae – Transmits electrical

• Divided into right and left hemispheres– Hemispheres connected by corpus

callosum• Each hemisphere is divided into 4 lobes:

– Frontal, Parietal, Temporal, Occipital• Covered by the cerebral cortex

– Composed of gray matter (unmyelinated nervous tissue)

– During embryonic development folds/rolls to fit into cranial cavity

• Gyri (JI-ri): Folds• Sulci (pl.)/Sulcus (singular): Shallow

grooves• Fissures: Deep grooves between folds

– Longitudinal fissure separates cerebral hemispheres

The Cerebrum

Page 10: The Brain Spinal Cord – Mass of nerve tissue located in the vertebral canal – Extends from Medulla Oblongata to 2 nd lumbar vertebrae – Transmits electrical

• Meninges– 3 layers of connective tissue that cover

spinal cord and brain– The dura mater is the outer most layer and

the toughest• Blood – Brain Barrier

– Semipermeable network of blood vessels and nervous tissue

– Prevents passage of harmful substances and pathogens from blood into brain

– Allows O2, CO2, alcohol, and anesthetics into brain tissue

• Cerebrospinal Fluid– Fluid that circulates around spinal cord and

ventricles of the brain – Carries O2, glucose, and other chemicals

from the blood to nervous tissue– Removes wastes and toxins produced by

brain and spinal cord

Protecting the CNS

Page 11: The Brain Spinal Cord – Mass of nerve tissue located in the vertebral canal – Extends from Medulla Oblongata to 2 nd lumbar vertebrae – Transmits electrical

Review1) What structure connects the cerebrum’s hemispheres?2) What structure bridges the cerebrum’s right and left

hemispheres?3) What main structure helps to maintain homeostasis?4) If your medulla was damaged in a car accident what would

happen? Why?5) What connects the CNS to sensors, muscles, and glands?6) What structure is found between the spinal cord and

diencephalon?7) Compare and contrast the ways the brain is protected from

pathogens, injury, and disease.8) Which structure allows for the pupillary reflex?9) What structure maintains muscle tone, posture, balance?10) What main structure connects the endocrine and nervous

system?