What is midbrain? A complete guide about midbrain with Mcqs and ppt with free download.
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MCQS FOR MIDBRAIN
Quiz
• The
midbrain measures about 0.8 inch (2 cm) in length
• and connects
the pons
and cerebellum with the forebrain (Fig. 5-23).
• Its long axis inclines anteriorly as it ascends through
the opening in the tentorium cerebelli.
• The midbrain is traversed by a narrow channel, the cerebral aqueduct, which
is filled
with cerebrospinal fluid (Figs. 5-24, 5-25, 5-26, 5-27 and 5-28).
The cerebellar tentorium or tentorium cerebelli(Latin:
"tent of the cerebellum") is an extension of the dura mater that
separates the cerebellum from the inferior portion of the occipital lobes.
Posterior surface
• On the
posterior surface are four colliculi (corpora quadrigemina).
• These are rounded eminences that are divided into superior and inferior
pairs by a vertical and a transverse groove (Fig.
5-26).
• The
superior colliculi are centers for visual reflexes (see p. 338), •
and
the inferior colliculi are lower
auditory centers.
• Origin of Trochlear nerves:
• In the midline below the inferior colliculi, the trochlear
nerves emerge. These are small-diameter nerves that wind around the lateral aspect of the midbrain to enter the lateral wall of the
cavernous sinus.
Lateral aspect:
• On the lateral aspect of the midbrain, the
superior and inferior brachia ascend in an anterolateral direction (Fig.
5-23).
• The superior brachium passes from the superior
colliculus to the lateral geniculate body and the optic tract.
• The inferior brachium connects the inferior colliculus to the
medial geniculate body.
Internal Structure of the Midbrain
• The midbrain comprises two lateral halves, called the cerebral
peduncles; each of these is
divided into an anterior part,
the crus cerebri, and
a posterior part, the tegmentum,
by a pigmented band of gray matter, the substantia nigra (Figs. 5-24 and 5-25)
• The narrow cavity of the midbrain is the cerebral
aqueduct, which connects the third and fourth ventricles. The tectum is the
part of the midbrain posterior to the
cerebral aqueduct; it
has four small surface swellings referred to previously; these are the two
superior and two inferior colliculi (Figs. 5-24 and 5-25). The
cerebral aqueduct is lined by
ependyma and is surrounded by the central gray matter. On transverse sections of the
midbrain, the interpeduncular fossa can be seen to separate the crura cerebri,
whereas the tegmentum is continuous across the median plane (Fig. 5-24).
Transverse Section of the Midbrain at the Level of the Inferior Colliculi
• The inferior colliculus, consisting of a large
nucleus of gray matter, lies beneath the corresponding surface elevation and
forms part of the auditory pathway (Figs.
5-25A and 5-27). It receives many of the terminal fibers of the lateral
lemniscus. The pathway then continues through the inferior brachium
to the medial geniculate body
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• median plane just. posterior to the medial longitudinal fasciculus. The e around the central gray matter and leave the midbrain just
below the
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• The
fibers of the trochlear nerve now decussate completely in the superior
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• The
mesencephalic nuclei of the trigeminal nerve are lateral to the
•
The decussation of the superior
cerebellar peduncles occupies the central
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• The
reticular formation is smaller than that of the pons and is situated
• The medial
lemniscus ascends posterior to
the substantia nigra;
• the spinal and trigeminal lemnisci are situated lateral to
the medial lemniscus (Figs. 5-25 and 5-27).
• The lateral
lemniscus is located posterior
to the trigeminal lemniscus.
• The substantia nigra (Figs. 5-25 and 5-27) is a large
motor nucleus situated between the tegmentum, and the crus cerebri and is found throughout the
midbrain. The nucleus is composed of medium-size multipolar neurons that possess inclusion
granules of melanin pigment within their cytoplasm.
• The substantia nigra is concerned with muscle tone and is
connected to the cerebral cortex, spinal cord, hypothalamus, and basal nuclei.
Descending Tracts
• The crus cerebri contains important descending tracts and is separated from the tegmentum by the substantia
nigra (Figs. 5-25 and 5-27).
• The corticospinal and corticonuclear fibers occupy the
middle two-thirds of the crus.
• The
frontopontine fibers occupy the medial part of the crus, and
• the temporopontine fibers occupy the lateral part of the
crus (Figs.
5-25 and 5-27).
• These descending tracts connect the cerebral cortex to the anterior
gray column cells of the spinal cord, the cranial nerve nuclei, the pons,
and the cerebellum (Table 5-4).
Transverse Section of the Midbrain at the Level of the Superior Colliculi
• The superior colliculus (Figs. 5-25B and 5-28), a large
nucleus of gray matter that lies beneath the corresponding surface elevation,
forms part of the visual reflexes. It is connected to the lateral
geniculate body by the superior brachium. It receives afferent fibers from the optic nerve, the
visual cortex, and the spinotectal tract.
• The efferent fibers form the tectospinal and tectobulbar
tracts, which are probably responsible for the reflex movements of the eyes,
head, and neck in response to visual stimuli
• The afferent pathway for the light reflex ends in the pretectal nucleus. This is
a small
group of
neurons situated close to the lateral part of the superior colliculus. After
relaying in the pretectal nucleus, the fibers pass to the parasympathetic
nucleus of the oculomotor nerve (Edinger-Westphal nucleus). The emerging fibers
then pass to the oculomotor nerve. The
oculomotor nucleus is situated in the central gray matter close to the
median plane, just posterior to the medial longitudinal fasciculus (Figs. 5-25B and 528). The fibers of the oculomotor nucleus
pass anteriorly through the red nucleus
to emerge on the medial side of
the crus cerebri in the interpeduncular
fossa. The nucleus of the oculomotor nerve is divisible into a
number of cell groups.
•
The medial, spinal, and trigeminal
lemniscilform
a curved band posterior to the substantia nigra, but the
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• aqueduct and the substantia nigra. Its reddish hue, seen inffresh
specimens, is due to its vascularity and the • Afferent fibers
reach the red nucleus from
• (1) the
cerebral cortex through the corticospinal fibers,
• (2) the
cerebellum through the superior cerebellar peduncle, and
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• (3) the
lentiform nucleus, subthalamic and hypothalamic nuclei, substantia nigra, and
spinal cord. Efferent
• (1) the
spinal cord through the rubrospinal tract (as this tract descends, it
decussates) • , (2)
the reticular formation through the rubroreticular tract,
• (3) the
thalamus, and
• (4) the
substantia nigra.
• The reticular formation is situated
in the tegmentum lateral and posterior to the red nucleus (Figs.
5-25B and 5-28).
• The crus cerebri contains the identical important
descending tractsâ!”the corticospinal, corticonuclear, and corticopontine
fibersâ!”that are present at the level of the inferior colliculus (see Table
5-4).
• The continuity of the various cranial nerve nuclei through
the different regions of the brainstem is shown diagrammatically in Figure
5-29.
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