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What is the brainstem?
A stalk-like structure at the basal area of the occipital bone, about the size of a human’s thumb, located infratentorial beneath the cerebrum and in front of the cerebellum.
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Where is the brainstem located?
Located infratentorial, beneath the cerebrum and in front of the cerebellum, immediately rostral to the Foramen Magnum.
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What are the main functions of the brainstem?
Houses nuclei vital for survival, serves as a conduit for ascending sensory and descending motor tracts, and is the attachment point for cranial nerves III to XII.
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What does the clivus support?
The clivus supports the pons, which is the ventral part of the brainstem.
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What is the role of the tentorium cerebelli?
It separates the cerebellum from the occipital lobe and parts of the temporal lobe, acting as an extension of the dura mater.
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Which cranial nerves exit the brainstem?
Cranial nerves III to XII exit the brainstem; I (olfactory) and II (optic) arise from the cerebrum.
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What is the anatomical orientation of the brainstem?
Rostral to the forebrain, posterior to the cerebellum, and caudal to the spinal cord.
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What are the cuts/views of the brain?
Coronal, transverse/horizontal, and sagittal cuts; each divides the brain in specific orientations.
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What is the significance of the ventricular system in the brainstem?
It is an area within the brainstem that plays a role in the brain's overall anatomy and function.
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What is CN X?
Vagus Nerve
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What is CN XI?
Accessory Nerve
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What is CN XII?
Hypoglossal Nerve
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What are the divisions of the brainstem from rostral to caudal?
Midbrain, Pons, Medulla
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What is located in the interpeduncular fossa?
CN III exits, surrounded by cerebral peduncles
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What do the pyramids of the medulla contain?
Motor tracts
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What are the three ventricles at the level of the brainstem?
Cerebral aqueduct, Fourth Ventricle, Central Canal
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What is the Basis pontis?
Ventral part of the pons containing corticospinal fibers
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What is found at the level above the midbrain?
Optic Chiasm and Optic Tract
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What are the mammillary bodies?
Part of the limbic system, involved in episodic memory
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Where does the Oculomotor Nerve exit?
From the medial area of the interpeduncular fossa
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What does the Trochlear Nerve innervate?
Superior Oblique Muscle (SO4)
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What does the pons contain?
Ascending fibers to the cerebrum and transverse fibers to the cerebellum
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What is the Trigeminal Nerve primarily responsible for?
Sensory functions in the posteromedial part of pons
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What are the two divisions of the Trigeminal Nerve?
Portio Major (sensory) and Portio Minor (motor)
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What is the sensory function of Portio Major?
Sensory function
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What is the motor function of Portio Minor?
Motor function for muscles of mastication
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Why is Portio Minor considered a small division?
Innervates only a few muscles
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What is the general location of the brainstem?
Located infratentorial, beneath the cerebrum and in front of the cerebellum, rostral to the Foramen Magnum.
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What is the size of the brainstem?
About the size of a human's thumb.
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What does the ventral portion of the brainstem face?
Faces the clivus.
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What is the function of the clivus?
Serves as the seat of the pons.
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What does the tentorium cerebelli separate?
Separates the cerebellum from the occipital lobe and parts of the temporal lobe.
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What structures are continuous with the brainstem?
Spinal cord.
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What is the function of the brainstem?
Houses nuclei vital for survival and serves as a conduit for sensory and motor tracts.
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How many cranial nerves exit from the brainstem?
Ten cranial nerves (III to XII).
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Which cranial nerves arise from the cerebrum?
Cranial nerves I (olfactory) and II (optic).
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What anatomical orientations are used for brain cuts?
Coronal, transverse (horizontal), and sagittal.
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What does a coronal cut divide?
Divides the brain anteriorly and posteriorly.
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What does a transverse cut divide?
Divides the brain superiorly and inferiorly.
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What does a sagittal cut divide?
Divides the brain into left and right parts.
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What is the anatomical term for the superior aspect of the brainstem?
Cranial or rostral.
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What is the anatomical term for the inferior aspect of the brainstem?
Caudal.
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What does the dorsal aspect of the brainstem refer to?
Posterior.
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What does the ventral aspect of the brainstem refer to?
Anterior.
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What is CN X?
Vagus Nerve
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What is CN XI?
Accessory Nerve
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What is CN XII?
Hypoglossal Nerve
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What are the divisions of the brainstem from rostral to caudal?
Midbrain, Pons, Medulla
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What does the interpeduncular fossa contain?
CN III exit, surrounded by cerebral peduncles
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What do the pyramids of the medulla contain?
Motor tracts
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What are the three ventricles at the brainstem level?
Cerebral aqueduct, Fourth Ventricle, Central Canal
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What is the Basis pontis?
Ventral part of the pons, contains corticospinal fibers
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What is the optic chiasm?
Where nasal fibers cross
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What is the pituitary stalk?
Median eminence of tuber cinereum, where pituitary gland attaches
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What do mammillary bodies do?
Part of limbic system, episodic memory, Papez circuit
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What is the interpeduncular fossa?
Deep depression in midline, contains pituitary stalk and mammillary bodies
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What does the Crus cerebri contain?
Descending motor fibers from cortex
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What is the function of Oculomotor Nerve (CN III)?
Innervates eye muscles, exits from interpeduncular fossa
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Where does the Trochlear Nerve (CN IV) exit?
From midbrain-pons junction, exits posteriorly
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What does the pons contain?
Ascending fibers to cerebrum, transverse fibers to cerebellum
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What is the Basilar artery?
Rests on basilar groove in pons, supplies the pons
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What is the Trigeminal Nerve (CN V)?
Primarily sensory, consists of Portio Major and Portio Minor
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What does Portio Major of the Trigeminal Nerve do?
Sensory function
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What does Portio Minor of the Trigeminal Nerve do?
Motor function for muscles of mastication
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What is the sensory function of the Portio Major?
Sensory function
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What is the motor function of the Portio Minor?
Motor function (muscles of mastication)
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Why is the Portio Minor considered a small division?
Motor function is only minor, innervating only a few muscles
Parcoures tes cartes ici, ou sign up to study with spaced repetition.
What is the brainstem?
A stalk-like structure at the basal area of the occipital bone, about the size of a human’s thumb, located infratentorial beneath the cerebrum and in front of the cerebellum.
Where is the brainstem located?
Located infratentorial, beneath the cerebrum and in front of the cerebellum, immediately rostral to the Foramen Magnum.
What are the main functions of the brainstem?
Houses nuclei vital for survival, serves as a conduit for ascending sensory and descending motor tracts, and is the attachment point for cranial nerves III to XII.
What does the clivus support?
The clivus supports the pons, which is the ventral part of the brainstem.
What is the role of the tentorium cerebelli?
It separates the cerebellum from the occipital lobe and parts of the temporal lobe, acting as an extension of the dura mater.
Which cranial nerves exit the brainstem?
Cranial nerves III to XII exit the brainstem; I (olfactory) and II (optic) arise from the cerebrum.
What is the anatomical orientation of the brainstem?
Rostral to the forebrain, posterior to the cerebellum, and caudal to the spinal cord.
What are the cuts/views of the brain?
Coronal, transverse/horizontal, and sagittal cuts; each divides the brain in specific orientations.
What is the significance of the ventricular system in the brainstem?
It is an area within the brainstem that plays a role in the brain's overall anatomy and function.
What is CN X?
Vagus Nerve
What is CN XI?
Accessory Nerve
What is CN XII?
Hypoglossal Nerve
What are the divisions of the brainstem from rostral to caudal?
Midbrain, Pons, Medulla
What is located in the interpeduncular fossa?
CN III exits, surrounded by cerebral peduncles
What do the pyramids of the medulla contain?
Motor tracts
What are the three ventricles at the level of the brainstem?
Cerebral aqueduct, Fourth Ventricle, Central Canal
What is the Basis pontis?
Ventral part of the pons containing corticospinal fibers
What is found at the level above the midbrain?
Optic Chiasm and Optic Tract
What are the mammillary bodies?
Part of the limbic system, involved in episodic memory
Where does the Oculomotor Nerve exit?
From the medial area of the interpeduncular fossa
What does the Trochlear Nerve innervate?
Superior Oblique Muscle (SO4)
What does the pons contain?
Ascending fibers to the cerebrum and transverse fibers to the cerebellum
What is the Trigeminal Nerve primarily responsible for?
Sensory functions in the posteromedial part of pons
What are the two divisions of the Trigeminal Nerve?
Portio Major (sensory) and Portio Minor (motor)
What is the sensory function of Portio Major?
Sensory function
What is the motor function of Portio Minor?
Motor function for muscles of mastication
Why is Portio Minor considered a small division?
Innervates only a few muscles
What is the general location of the brainstem?
Located infratentorial, beneath the cerebrum and in front of the cerebellum, rostral to the Foramen Magnum.
What is the size of the brainstem?
About the size of a human's thumb.
What does the ventral portion of the brainstem face?
Faces the clivus.
What is the function of the clivus?
Serves as the seat of the pons.
What does the tentorium cerebelli separate?
Separates the cerebellum from the occipital lobe and parts of the temporal lobe.
What structures are continuous with the brainstem?
Spinal cord.
What is the function of the brainstem?
Houses nuclei vital for survival and serves as a conduit for sensory and motor tracts.
How many cranial nerves exit from the brainstem?
Ten cranial nerves (III to XII).
Which cranial nerves arise from the cerebrum?
Cranial nerves I (olfactory) and II (optic).
What anatomical orientations are used for brain cuts?
Coronal, transverse (horizontal), and sagittal.
What does a coronal cut divide?
Divides the brain anteriorly and posteriorly.
What does a transverse cut divide?
Divides the brain superiorly and inferiorly.
What does a sagittal cut divide?
Divides the brain into left and right parts.
What is the anatomical term for the superior aspect of the brainstem?
Cranial or rostral.
What is the anatomical term for the inferior aspect of the brainstem?
Caudal.
What does the dorsal aspect of the brainstem refer to?
Posterior.
What does the ventral aspect of the brainstem refer to?
Anterior.
What is CN X?
Vagus Nerve
What is CN XI?
Accessory Nerve
What is CN XII?
Hypoglossal Nerve
What are the divisions of the brainstem from rostral to caudal?
Midbrain, Pons, Medulla
What does the interpeduncular fossa contain?
CN III exit, surrounded by cerebral peduncles
What do the pyramids of the medulla contain?
Motor tracts
What are the three ventricles at the brainstem level?
Cerebral aqueduct, Fourth Ventricle, Central Canal
What is the Basis pontis?
Ventral part of the pons, contains corticospinal fibers
What is the optic chiasm?
Where nasal fibers cross
What is the pituitary stalk?
Median eminence of tuber cinereum, where pituitary gland attaches
What do mammillary bodies do?
Part of limbic system, episodic memory, Papez circuit
What is the interpeduncular fossa?
Deep depression in midline, contains pituitary stalk and mammillary bodies
What does the Crus cerebri contain?
Descending motor fibers from cortex
What is the function of Oculomotor Nerve (CN III)?
Innervates eye muscles, exits from interpeduncular fossa
Where does the Trochlear Nerve (CN IV) exit?
From midbrain-pons junction, exits posteriorly
What does the pons contain?
Ascending fibers to cerebrum, transverse fibers to cerebellum
What is the Basilar artery?
Rests on basilar groove in pons, supplies the pons
What is the Trigeminal Nerve (CN V)?
Primarily sensory, consists of Portio Major and Portio Minor
What does Portio Major of the Trigeminal Nerve do?
Sensory function
What does Portio Minor of the Trigeminal Nerve do?
Motor function for muscles of mastication
What is the sensory function of the Portio Major?
Sensory function
What is the motor function of the Portio Minor?
Motor function (muscles of mastication)
Why is the Portio Minor considered a small division?
Motor function is only minor, innervating only a few muscles
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