The Cerebellum.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Cerebellar system and diseases
Advertisements

The Cerebellum.
Cerebellum. Site: Posterior cranial fossa, behind pons & medulla oblongata. 2 Surfaces: Superior & Inferior. 3 Parts: * Vermis - Superior: indistinct.
The Cerebellum 陽明大學醫學院 神經學系 陳昌明 醫師.
Cerebellum Won Taek Lee, M.D. Ph.D.
No Cerebellum 2. Diencephalon.
LECTURE 28- ANATOMY OF CEREBELLUM AND ITS CONNECTIONS Dr. Mohammad Rehan Asad.
Cerebellum Kiranmayi S..
Michael S. Beauchamp, Ph.D. Assistant Professor Department of Neurobiology and Anatomy University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston Houston, TX.
Cerebellum MIMSA’s Anatomy sessions cerebellum Motor part of the brain Coordination of movement Regulation of muscle tone Maintenance of equilibrium.
 Three Layers ◦ Molecular, Purkinje, Granular Cell  Fibers ◦ Climbing (Olive) ◦ Mossy (Not Olive) ◦ Parallel  Output ◦ Purkinje Cells M P G W Climbing.
No Motor Pathways 1. Motor Pathways. Ⅱ. The Motor (descending) Pathways The motor pathways are concerned with motor function, and composed of upper.
V. overview of major regions of the brain
Cerebellum Yung-Yang Lin Institute of Brain Science National Yang-Ming University Reference:
PhD MD MBBS Faculty of Medicine Al Maarefa Colleges of Science & Technology Faculty of Medicine Al Maarefa Colleges of Science & Technology Lecture – 8:
1 Chapters 12 Motor System – Cerebellum Chris Rorden University of South Carolina Norman J. Arnold School of Public Health Department of Communication.
صدق الله العظيم الاسراء اية 58. Physiology of Cerebellum.
Chapter 15 CEREBELLUM Dr. Mohammed Alanazy.
Motor Areas Pyramidal & Extrapyramidal System
Pyramidal and extrapyramidal tracts
Descending Tracts Dr Rania Gabr.
The Cerebellum. –The cerebellar cortex is folded into numerous, small gyri, making it easy to distinguish from the cerebral hemispheres. –The cerebellum.
Cerebellum (小脑).
IX. cerebrum – 83% of total brain mass
Sensorimotor functions of the cerebellum
Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings Connects the brain with the spinal cord Contains relay stations and reflex centers.
Brain Development: Primary vesiclesSecondary vesiclesAdult brain part ProencephalonDiencephalonThalamus & Hypothalamus TelencephalonCerebrum Mesencephalon.
Cerebellum John H. Martin, Ph.D. Center for Neurobiology & Behavior Columbia University.
Anatomy of the Brain Stem
PP 03c-Gross anatomy, in more detail. Brainstem Structures: Structures: –Midbrain –Pons –Medulla.
Cerebellum and pathways
Physiology of Motor Tracts Dr. Taha Sadig Ahmed, 1.
Physiology of Motor Tracts
The Brain & The Spinal Cord I- The brain: 1- The Meninges: Dura Matter Dura Matter Arachinoid Matter Arachinoid Matter Pia Matter Pia Matter 2- The forebrain.
Brain anatomy: Cerebellum
Cerebellum Dr. Safaa. Cerebellum Dr. Safaa Objectives Identify the major lobes and regions of cerebellum. Summarize the structure of the cerebellar.
Clinical Case A patient delays initiation of movement, displays an uneven trajectory in moving her hand from above her head to touch her nose, and is uneven.
Functional Anatomy  ‘little brain’  10% of brain mass  As many neurons as the rest of the CNS  Every kind of sensory input reaches the cerebellar.
Brainstem and Cerebellum Nestor T. Hilvano, M.D., M.P.H.
aftab ansari. Gross Appearance It is the largest part of the hindbrain and lies posterior to the fourth ventricle, the pons and the medulla.
CEREBELLUM. Gross Morphology Tentorium cerebelli Tentorium cerebelli Falx cerebelli Falx cerebelli.
Cerebellum D.Nimer D.Rania Gabr D.Safaa D.Elsherbiny.
pyramidal pyramidal And AndExtrapyramidal tracts tracts By: Dr. Khaled Ibrahim.
The Cerebellum 小 脑 The Cerebellum 小 脑. lies above and behind the medulla oblongata and pons; occupies posterior cranial fossa Cerebellum Position:
ASHIQ DEPARTMENT OF ANATOMY
بسم الله الرحمن الرحیم. Cerebellum 10 th Lecture Cerebellum Anatomy Function Clinical points.
Motor Pathways Dr Ayman G. Abu-Tabanja.
Clinical Case A patient delays initiation of movement, displays an uneven trajectory in moving her hand from above her head to touch her nose, and is uneven.
Cerebellum External Configurations Cerebellum External Configurations - located in posterior cranial fossa - tentorium cerebelli (cerebrum), 4th ventricle.
Neuroanatomy Lectures
Cerebellum 1.
SHANDONG UNIVERSITY Liu Zhiyu
The Motor System Chapter 8.
The Cerebellum SHANDONG UNIVERSITY Liu Zhiyu
Cerebellum January 15, 2008.
Cerebellum: Organization and Cerebellar Pathways
THE CEREBELLUM & ITS RELEVANT CONNECTIONS
The Cerebellum.
The cerebellum Location:
The cerebellum:.
Chapters 12 Motor System – Cerebellum
Cerebellum and movement modulation
LAB #10: CEREBELLUM.
The Cerebellum 小 脑.
DESCENDING TRACTS. DESCENDING TRACTS Fiber Types A Fibers: Somatic, myelinated. Alpha (α): Largest, also referred to as Type I. Beta (β): Also referred.
Objectives At the end of the lecture, students should be able to:
THE CEREBELLUM & ITS RELEVANT CONNECTIONS
External features of cerebellum It consists of 2 hemispheres & a vermis connecting them. Superiorly the cerebellar hemisphere shows primary fissure.
Cerebellum. Prof. K. Sivapalan.
Presentation transcript:

The Cerebellum

Position Lies above and behind the medulla and pons and occupies posterior cranial fossa Its surface is high convoluted, forming folds or folia, being oriented transversely Cerebellum

External features Consists of two cerebellar hemisphere united in the midline by the vermis

External features Three peduncles Inferior cerebellar peduncle -connect with medulla and with spinal cord, contain both afferent and efferent fibers Middle cerebellar peduncle -connect with pons, contain afferent fibers Superior cerebellar peduncle -connect with midbrain, contain mostly efferent fibers

External features Tonsil of cerebellum two elevated masses on inferior surface of hemispheral portion just nearby foramen magnum

Lobes Two deep fissures Three lobs Primary fissure Uvulonodular fissure Three lobs Flocculonodular lobe Anterior Posterior lobe

Lobes Anterior lobe corpus of cerebellar Primary fissure Posterior lobe Flocculonodular lobe Posterolateral fissure

Internal structures White matter Gray matter Cerebellar cortex Cerebellar nuclei Dentate nucleus Fastigial nucleus Emboliform nucleus Globose nucleus White matter

Internal structures Fastigial nucleus Cerebellar cortex Globose nucleus Dentate nucleus Emboliform nucleus medullary center

Deep Nuclei 1. fastigial nucleus 2. globose 3. emboliform 4. dentate

Three functional divisions Vestibulocerebellum Archicerebellum Flocculonodular lobe Spinocerebellum Paleocerebellum Vermis and intermediate zone Cerebrocerebellum Neocerebellum Lateral zone Vermis Intermediate zone Lateral zone Flocculonodular lobe

Cerebellar divisions Spinocerebellum: Vermis Intermediate hem. (Vermis + Intermed. Hem) Control of limbs and trunk Lateral hem. Cerebrocerebellum: Cerebrocerebellum (Lateral hemisphere) Planning of movement+ IVth vent Floculo-nodular lobe Vestibulo-cerebellum (Floculo-nodular lobe) Control of eye & head movements Balance

Connections and function of cerebellum Vestibulocerebellum Connections Afferents: receive input from vestibular nuclei and inner ear. Efferents: projects to the vestibular nucleus → vestibulospinal → motor neurons of anterior horn Function: involved in eye movements and maintain balance

Connections and function of cerebellum Spinocerebellum Connnection Afferents: receive somatic sensory information via spinocerebellar tracts

Efferents: Fastigeal reticular and fastigial vestibular pathways: Vermis projects to the fastigial nucleus → vestibular nuclei and reticular formation → vestibulospinal tract and reticulospinal tract → motor neurons of anterior horn Intermediate zone projects to the interposed nuclei Globose- emboliform-rubral pathway: Contralateral red nucleus → rubrospinal tract →motor neurons of anterior horn Function: play an important role in control of muscle tone and coordination of muscle movement on the same side of the body

Connections and function of cerebellum Cerebrocerebellum Connection Afferents: receives input from the cerebral cortex via a relay in pontine nuclei(corticopontocerebellar pathway) Efferents: (dentothalamic pathway): dentate nucleus → contralateral thalamus → primary motor cortex → corticospinal tract → motor neurons of anterior horn Function: participates in planning movements

summary Cerebellar efferent fibers: Globose-emboliform-rubral pathway Dentothalamic pathway Fastigial reticular pathway Fastigial vestibular pathway

summary Cerebellar afferent fibers: Afferent fibers from cerebral cortex: corticopontocerebellar pathway. Afferent fibers from spinal cord: Anterior and posterior spinocerebellar tracts Afferent fibers from vestibular nerve

Pyramidal Tract and Associated Circuits upper motor neuron UMN Cerebellum BASAL GANGLIA pyramidal tract lower motor neuron UMN

Cerebellum Function  Maintenance of Equilibrium - balance, posture, eye movement  Coordination of movement of walking and posture maintenance - posture, gait  Adjustment of Muscle Tone  Motor Learning – Motor Skills

Balance

Motor Skill Pablo Casals

Cerebellum Clinical Syndromes 1-Ataxia: incoordination of movement - decomposition of movement - tremor - past-pointing 2- dysdiadochokinesia 3-Hypotonia, Nystagmus 4- dysarthria

Posture Gait – Ataxia

Cerebellar Ataxia a b c d Ataxic gait and position: Left cerebellar tumor a. Sways to the right in standing position b. Steady on the right leg c. Unsteady on the left leg d. ataxic gait d