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Complete summary for the ENDTERM of Medical Neuroscience & Neuro anatomy

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The lectures and chapters from the book have been combined in a clear summary for the endterm. Here and there some Dutch bits have been added (green and italicized) so that it is also clear for Dutch students. Furthermore, many pictures have been used to illustrate and you will find more clear pictures in the middle that are useful to learn/know for the exam. Some parts are combined together, so it is be more clear. For example, earlier in the lectures Parkinson's disease is briefly discussed, later in the lectures PD was discussed more detailed. The more detailed information is then combined with the first piece of information about parkingson.

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¿Un libro?
No
¿Qué capítulos están resumidos?
1,2, 4, 5, 6, 7, 10, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19
Subido en
15 de diciembre de 2021
Archivo actualizado en
17 de diciembre de 2021
Número de páginas
94
Escrito en
2021/2022
Tipo
Resumen

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Exam preparation
Medical Neuroscience & Neuroanatomy
Lectures and literature

Inhoudsopgave
Lecture 1 & Chapters 1,2 and relevant pages of 10 and 12 ............................................................................... 4
General history and physical exam .................................................................................................................... 4
Hemiparesis vs. paralysis ................................................................................................................................... 4
Hearth arrythmia................................................................................................................................................ 5
Arteries ............................................................................................................................................................... 5
Embryological of the central nervous system ..................................................................................................... 6
White vs. Gray matter ....................................................................................................................................... 10
Anatomical organization: various ways of subdividing the nervous system .................................................... 11
Lesion vs. Hand ................................................................................................................................................ 13
Short Summary ................................................................................................................................................. 13
Stretch reflex .................................................................................................................................................... 14

Lecture 2 & Chapter 6 ........................................................................................................................................ 14
Somatic versus autonomic nervous system ....................................................................................................... 14
Visceral motor system ...................................................................................................................................... 17
Parkingson disease ........................................................................................................................................... 18
Important terms ................................................................................................................................................ 21
Pyramidal or extrapyramidal systems (motor functions) ................................................................................. 22
Ascending motor pathway ................................................................................................................................ 26
Tentorial Herniation ........................................................................................................................................ 26
Coma ................................................................................................................................................................ 27
Primary, secondary and tertiary areas (association cortices) ......................................................................... 27

Lecture 3 & Chapter 7 and 10............................................................................................................................ 28
Motor vs. somatosensory cortical areas ........................................................................................................... 28
Internal capsule ................................................................................................................................................ 28
Blood vessels .................................................................................................................................................... 29
Figures + tables for exam ................................................................................................................................ 32
Neurons ............................................................................................................................................................ 32
Neurotransmitters............................................................................................................................................. 33
Four different basic system sorts of metabolism of neurotransmitters ............................................................. 33

, 4 types of receptors .......................................................................................................................................... 34

Lecture 4 & Chapter 7, 12 and 13...................................................................................................................... 36
Neurophysiology............................................................................................................................................... 36
Psychogalvanic response or lie detector test ................................................................................................... 36
Nerve conduction influences ............................................................................................................................ 36
What can go wrong in motor nerve condition? ................................................................................................ 36
Clinical syndromes ........................................................................................................................................... 37
Needle examination .......................................................................................................................................... 37
Summary → Good reasons for an electromyographic test ............................................................................... 38
Posturing and triple flexion .............................................................................................................................. 38
Signs of upper motor neurons and lower motor neuron lesions ....................................................................... 38
Functional neurological disorder..................................................................................................................... 39
How does pain work? ....................................................................................................................................... 39
Which fibers are transmitting pain? ................................................................................................................. 40
Pain Lamineas .................................................................................................................................................. 40
Somatosensory pathways .................................................................................................................................. 41
Examples of type of pain .................................................................................................................................. 42
Referred pain Head’s zones ............................................................................................................................. 42

Lecture 5 & Chapter 12, 13 and 14.................................................................................................................... 42
Pain pathways .................................................................................................................................................. 42
Pain suppression: gate control theory (spinal cord level) + music ................................................................. 43
Descending pathways ....................................................................................................................................... 44
Ascending Reticular Activating System (ARAS): .............................................................................................. 44
Locked-in syndrome ......................................................................................................................................... 45
Sleep ................................................................................................................................................................. 45
Consciousness .................................................................................................................................................. 48

Nice pictures to know .......................................................................................................................................... 51

Lecture 6 & Chapter 12 + Lecture 7 & Chapter 15 and 16 ............................................................................. 52
Visual system .................................................................................................................................................... 52
Taste: ................................................................................................................................................................ 54
Cranial nerves .................................................................................................................................................. 54
Horner’s syndrome ...................................................................................................................................... 56
Cranial nerves with a parasympathetic function include: ................................................................................ 63
Basic knowledge about the lobes + cortex ....................................................................................................... 63

Part of lecture 7 & Chapter 15 and 16 + Lecture 8 & Chapter 15 and 17 ..................................................... 63
Cerebellum ....................................................................................................................................................... 63
Basal ganglia: .................................................................................................................................................. 67

Lecture 9 & Chapter 5, 10, 11, 12, 15, 16 and 18 .............................................................................................. 70

, Different lobes .................................................................................................................................................. 70
Limbic lobe/system ........................................................................................................................................... 70
Hippocampus ............................................................................................................................................... 71
Memory ....................................................................................................................................................... 72
Amygdala .................................................................................................................................................... 72

Lecture 10 ............................................................................................................................................................ 73
Brain tumors: ................................................................................................................................................... 73
Neuroplasticity ................................................................................................................................................. 78
Neuroimaging ................................................................................................................................................... 79
Magnetoencephalogram............................................................................................................................... 79
Lesion mapping ........................................................................................................................................... 79

Lecture 11 & Chapter 5, 10 and 19.................................................................................................................... 79
Multiple sclerosis (MS): ................................................................................................................................... 79
Normal brain vs. pathological brain in MS.................................................................................................. 84
Epilepsy: ........................................................................................................................................................... 84
Single-neuron recordings in the human medial temporal lobe (S.E.R.I.E.S.): ................................................. 88
Understanding human neuronal circuits .......................................................................................................... 89
Cerebrospinal fluid disorders .......................................................................................................................... 90
The neurosurgical law by Monro Kellie Doctrine ....................................................................................... 92

Lecture 12 & Chapter 4 and 16.......................................................................................................................... 92
MRI vs. CT-scan ............................................................................................................................................... 92
Brain Trauma ................................................................................................................................................... 93
How to treat an aneurysm ................................................................................................................................ 94

, Lecture 1 & Chapters 1,2 and relevant pages of 10 and 12

General history and physical exam
The general history and physical exam (H&P) usually contain the following elements:
• The chief complaint (CC)
• History of the present illness (HPI)
• Past medical history (PMH)
• Review of systems (ROS)
• Family history (FHx)
• Social and environmental history (SocHx/EnvHx)
• Medications and allergies
• Physical exam
• Laboratory data
• Assessment and plan

Hemiparesis vs. paralysis
Patient with stroke (infarction or hemorrhage bleeding): can have both a pure hemiparesis
or an paralysis. The stroke can both be a cortical as well as a subcortical problem

Pure hemiparesis: paralysis of one part of the body. Weakness of muscles (CNS problem)
(NL: verlamming van een kant van je lichaam)
• Pure hemiparesis with no sensory loss?
Then we can exclude some hypothesis, like:
o Cortical lesion: unlikely because a cortical lesion would involve the entire
motor strip (nearby sensory strip), therefore there is a high risk for sensory
involvement
(NL: hersenschors bedenkt veel kwabben, waaronder de hele motorstrip)
o Peripheral lesion: unlikely because the olfactory nerve and the opticus nerves
are peripheral, therefore the whole face would be affected as well as the
entire half of the body
(NL: hierbij zou het gezicht dus aangedaan moeten zijn)
o Medulla and the spinal cord are affected: unlikely because the face would be
spared and with pure hemiparesis half of the face is affected (only the lower
part of the face) The upper part of the face is controlled by the ipsilateral and
contralateral side. So, one side can take over the functions of the other side
(NL: als de medulla en ruggengraat geraakt zijn, is het gezicht ook vaak
aangetast)
o No sensory loss with pure hemiplegia is not very common
We can also include some areas:
o More likely to have sensory problems if you have a stroke near the motor
cortex, because the somatosensory cortex is nearby
So it could be in the following areas: this region motor systems come close together,
face also has bilateral branch so upper half will be ok
o Corticospinal/pyramidal tract (large motor systems) and corticobulbar
o Contralateral: on the other side
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