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Semester B Summary - Neuroscience (5BBA2081)

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A comprehensive, highly detailed summary of the Kings College London Neuroscience module (5BBA2081) taken in the 2nd year of courses such as Neuroscience and Biomedical Science in the Faculty of Life Sciences and Medicine. This document covers Semester B content only, I am also selling an equivalent summary for Semester A as this is a 30 credit module. The summary covers all the lectures in depth, as well as extra reading from core textbooks and academic papers already incorporated into the notes, so no extra work is needed to obtain the highest marks. I memorised this document alone and placed first in the year with 80% in the exam! Topics covered include visual and auditory processing, hypothalamus, Depression, Parkinson's, neuroanatomy, blood supply/neurovasculature, neuroimmunology, drugs/addiction, learning, memory and more. It would therefore also be relevant for anyone studying life sciences/neurology from medical students to nursing trainees etc.

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Semester B
Reviewed

name the sensory inputs that result in a sense of balance

vestibular system + vision + proprioception

describe the anatomy of the vestibular apparatus

inner ear, deep in petrous part of temporal bone, lateral/posterior to
cochlea = 3 semicircular canals (ant/lat/post) + 2 otolith organs

outer bony labyrinth = semicircular canals > apulla > ventricle + canal for
facial nerve > cochlea = perilymph inside (like ECF ie. high Na/low K)

inner membranous labyrinth = semicircular ducts > utricle > saccule >
ductus reuniens > cohlear ducts = endolymph inside (like ICF low Na/high
K)

pumps generates the conc gradient/membrane potential over the inner
membrane = greatest ~80mv at cochlea (fluids drained by endolymphatic
duct)




explain how hair cells respond to movement in semicircular canals and
otolithic organs and predict how directional movement increases or decreases
their firing rate

hair cells = sensory receptors in epithelial cell layer, polarised, I (chalice)
and II (cylindrical)




Semester B 1

, basal = glutamatergic synapse > tonic slow resting firing of primary
afferents to VC nerve

apical = 40-70 stereocilia (actin) on elastic cuticular plate (returns
sterocilia to position), getting shorter down axis of polarity, tallest =
kinocilium

top of lower connected to side of taller by tip links with
mechanotransducer ion channels - efferent input (ACh/CGRP) from
brainstem and myosin adjustment of tip link tension to control sensitivity

motion towards kinocilium > channels open > K influx from endolymph
(not AP) > depolarisation > VGCC open > NT release > inc firing down
CN8

motion away from kinocilium > channels close > hyperpolarisation > dec
firing

explain the different types of movement that the semicircular canals and
otolithic organs (saccule & utricle) respond to

1. semicircular ducts = angular/rotational acceleration

3 at 90 degrees = 3 axis directional info = v sensitive

ampullary crest = thickening of epithelia inside ampulla, topped with
gelatinous cupula embedded with hair cells all with axis in same direction
(towards utricle)

eg. head turns left > acceleration (not constant velocity) generates force >
shifts fluid in ducts to right > left side hair cells bend towards axis (fire) +
right side bend away (dec fire) = signals

dont detect linear as linear planes hit cupula from both sides so cancel out

otolith organs

2. utricle = static head tilt, linear acceleration

otoconia (calcium carbonate crystals) sit on top of gelatinous material =
otolith > otolithic membrane with sterocilia poking into otolith > soma of
hair cells embedded in thickened epithelium = macula (horizontal when
upright) > nerve fibres




Semester B 2

, cilia not all aligned but face TOWARDS curved landmark of striola

eg. head tilt to left/linear acceleration right > gravity drags otolithic mass
to left > shear causes left hair cells bend away from axis (dec fire) and
right side bend towards (fire)

frequent fluctuations = motion sickness

dont detect rotation as endolymph flow isnt strong enough to move heavy
mass

3. saccule = head position, vertical linear acceleration

as ^ but macula vertical when upright and cilia face AWAY from striola

list the connections of the vestibular nuclei and explain their relevance
CN8 (vestibulocochlear)

1. labyrinth > primary afferents (first axon) of bipolar vestibular ganglion >
other axon joins cochlear part to form CN8

2. CN8 through internal acoutus meatus and enters brainstem at
cerebellopontine angle

3. to ipsilateral nuclei in medulla (levels of inf cerebellar peduncle):

a) lateral vestibular nuclei = mainly from utricle(/saccule) > lateral
vestibulospinal/vestibulocerebellar to coordinate limb extensor/flexors for
balance

b) medial/superior vestibular nuclei = mainly from semicircular ducts >
medial vestibulospinal to innervate cervical (eg. neck extension on falling)
+ medial longitudinal fasciculus to CN3/4/6 nuclei to coordinate head/eye
movements (vestibuloocular reflex - head rotation rotates eyes in same
angle but opposite direction) + thalamus then motor cortex for conscious
perception of movement/space

5. also sends direct primary afferents to cerebellum (only sensory organ):

a) primary vestibulocerebellar fibres through juxtarestiform body and
medial inf cerebellar peduncle

b) to mossy fibres > fastigial nucleus




Semester B 3

, c) reciprocal connections with vestibular nuclei to regulate
head/eye/balance

provide a few examples for disorders that affect the vestibular system

assess with caloric test of warm water in ear

1. menieres disease

excess endolymph (endolymphatic hydrops) > distension of membranous
labyrinth > severe vertigo, nausea, nystagmus, progressive hearing loss,
tinnitus

2. benign positional vertigo

cupololithiasis = otoconia dislodged into posterior semicircular ducts >
movement causes abnormal fluid displacement = brief vertigo

3. acoustic neuroma/vestibular schwannoma

benign schwann cell tumour in C8 at cerebellopontine angle >
vestibular/hearing/cerebellar defects + facial palsy from CN7 compression

physics of auditory system

vibrations > pressure wave from source (sound) > transduced in ear into
neural signals > brain

frequency (Hz - cycle/s, humans 20-20000) = pitch = 1/T(period, time for
one full cycle)

amplitude (decibels, log ie. 60Db is 1millx 1Db) = volume

anatomy of external ear

elastic fibrocartilagenous pinna (helix, lobule, tragus) = collects sound and
discriminates direction

external auditory meatus (canal) = 2.5cm s shaped, air filled, first 1/3
cartilage then temporal bone, skin supplied by sensory from CN10

canal ends at concave (bulge out, shiny on light reflex test) tympanic
membrane (drum) lying at oblique angle, supplied by sensory from CN5

anatomy of middle ear




Semester B 4
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