Spinal Cord Physiology





Spinal Cord Physiology


Spinal Cord Physiology

Spinal Cord Physiology

The spinal cord is a vital part of the central nervous system, located within the vertebral canal. It is divided into 32 segments: 8 cervical, 12 thoracic, 5 lumbar, 4 sacral, and 1 coccygeal. Each spinal segment has a pair of spinal nerve roots (spinal nerves, or dorsal roots), consisting of an anterior root and a posterior root, which combine to form a spinal nerve.

  • Anterior root, also known as the motor root: contains alpha and gamma motor neurons, controlling the contraction of skeletal muscles.
  • Posterior root, also known as the sensory root: receives sensory axons, with cell bodies in the posterior root ganglion.

Cross-section diagram of the spinal cord:

  • Gray matter: located in the center, divided into 3 horns:
  • Anterior horn: motor horn
  • Posterior horn: sensory horn
  • Lateral horn: intermediate horn, only present in some locations: cervical segments C8 to L2 and sacral segments S2-S4.
  • Lateral horn in cervical segments C8 -L2: contains neurons of the sympathetic ganglion.
  • Lateral horn in sacral segments S2-S4: contains parasympathetic neurons.
  • White matter: surrounds the gray matter, divided into 3 columns:
  • Anterior column: contains the anterior corticospinal tract (direct pyramidal tract).
  • Lateral column: contains the spinothalamic tract, lateral corticospinal tract (crossed pyramidal tract) and spinocerebellar tract.
  • Posterior column: contains the gracile fasciculus and cuneate fasciculus.

Functions of the spinal cord:

  • Transmission:
  • Sensory:
  • Touch: anterior spinothalamic tract.
  • Pain, temperature: lateral spinothalamic tract.
  • Conscious proprioception: gracile fasciculus and cuneate fasciculus.
  • Unconscious proprioception: spinocerebellar tract.
  • Motor:
  • Voluntary: corticospinal tract (direct pyramidal tract and crossed pyramidal tract).
  • Involuntary: extrapyramidal system (rubrospinal tract, reticulospinal tract, tectospinal tract, vestibulospinal tract, olivospinal tract).

Spinal reflexes:

The spinal cord is the center for spinal reflexes, following general reflex laws and anatomical arrangement. Specific rules of spinal reflexes:

  • Unilateral rule: weak stimuli only produce reflexes at the site of stimulation.
  • Symmetrical rule: increased stimulus intensity causes reflexes on the opposite side.
  • Diffusion rule: further increasing stimulus intensity, the reflex will spread from posterior to anterior on the same side of stimulation.
  • Holistic rule: stimuli with excessive intensity will cause reflexes to spread throughout the body, causing all muscles to contract.

Spinal reflex arc: consists of 5 components:

  • Sensory receptor
  • Afferent nerve
  • Neural center
  • Efferent nerve
  • Effector organ

The spinal reflex arc can be:

  • 2-neuron reflex arc (monosynaptic reflex): sensory receptors in the periphery enter the posterior root, synapse with motor neurons in the anterior horn of the spinal cord -> control effector organs.
  • 3-neuron reflex arc (polysynaptic reflex): includes interneurons.

Basic spinal reflexes:

  • Stretch reflex:
  • Golgi tendon reflex: affects receptors in the tendon.
  • Muscle spindle reflex: stimulation of muscle spindle receptors causes muscle contraction to protect against excessive muscle tension.
  • Flexor reflex (withdrawal reflex): flexes muscles to move the body part away from danger.
  • Crossed extensor reflex: controls the contralateral limb, extending the limb to prevent falling.
  • Cutaneous reflex: produced by stimulating receptors in the skin.
  • Tonic reflex: helps maintain balance, posture, and body alignment.
  • Autonomic reflexes:
  • Diffusely localized: sweating reflex, goosebumps reflex, vasomotor reflex.
  • Localized: bladder reflex, genital reflex, eye blink reflex.

Examination of spinal reflexes: helps locate the region of spinal cord injury.

Spinal shock:

  • Spinal cord transection: the part below the lesion is paralyzed, loses sensation, loses muscle tone, loses reflexes, and blood pressure drops rapidly.
  • Spinal shock period: about 2-3 weeks.
  • Post-spinal shock: increased reflexes, increased muscle tone, due to loss of inhibition of the central nervous system on the spinal cord.

Spinal animal: an animal with a spinal cord transection below the medulla oblongata, its muscles do not relax completely but are slightly contracted -> spinal tone.

Tabes dorsalis: damage to the gracile fasciculus and cuneate fasciculus, causing loss of pressure sensation, weight sensation, and uncoordinated walking.

Unconscious proprioceptive pathway: controlled by the cerebellum, helps maintain balance and coordinate automatic movements.

Motor transmission pathways:

  • Pyramidal tract: transmits voluntary movements (corticospinal tract, corticobulbar tract).
  • Extrapyramidal tract: transmits involuntary movements (rubrospinal tract, reticulospinal tract, tectospinal tract, vestibulospinal tract, olivospinal tract).

Note:

  • This text has been rewritten from the provided data, but may be missing some details or have unclear details.
  • To understand spinal cord physiology better, refer to specialized literature.



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