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Spinal Cord and Spinal Nerves

Spinal Cord and Spinal Nerves. Spinal Cord. Enclosed in the vertebral canal, extends from the foramen magnum of the skull to the first or second lumbar vertebra where it terminates in the cone shaped conus medullaris. Spinal Cord. Spinal meninges; Dura Mater – outer Arachnoid Mater – middle

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Spinal Cord and Spinal Nerves

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  1. Spinal Cord and Spinal Nerves

  2. Spinal Cord • Enclosed in the vertebral canal, extends from the foramen magnum of the skull to the first or second lumbar vertebra where it terminates in the cone shaped conus medullaris

  3. Spinal Cord • Spinal meninges; • Dura Mater – outer • Arachnoid Mater – middle • Pia Mater – inner

  4. Spinal Cord • Dura Mater – composed of dense, irregular connective tissue

  5. Spinal Cord • Arachnoid Mater – It is an avascular covering with a spider’s web arrangement of delicate collagen fibers and some elastic fibers

  6. Spinal Cord • Pia Mater – A vascular and thin transparent connective tissue layer composed of interlacing bundles of collagen fibers and some fine elastic fibers

  7. Spinal Cord • Subarachnoid space – between the arachnoid mater and pia mater which contains cerebrospinal fluid

  8. Spinal Cord • The dura mater and arachnoid meningeal coverings extend beyond the conus medullaris, approximately to the level of S2

  9. Spinal Cord • Filium terminale – a fibrous extension of the pia mater, extends farther and attaches to the posterior coccyx

  10. Spinal Cord • 31 pairs of spinal nerves, which exit via the intervertebral foramina

  11. Spinal Cord • Since the spinal cord doesn’t extend to the end of the vertebral column, the spinal nerves emerging from the inferior end must travel through the vertebral canal until reaching the appropriate intervertebral foramina

  12. Spinal Cord • This collection of spinal nerves are called the cauda equina

  13. Spinal Cord / Gray Matter • Looks like an H

  14. Spinal Cord / Gray Matter • Posterior or dorsal horns – posterior projections

  15. Spinal Cord / Gray Matter • Anterior or ventral horns – anterior projections that contain cell bodies of motor neurons

  16. Spinal Cord / Gray Matter • Lateral Horns – In the thoracic and lumbar regions there is a lateral outpocketing of gray matter

  17. Spinal Cord / Gray Matter • Gray commissure – central area of gray matter

  18. Spinal Cord / Gray Matter • Dorsal root – Sensory fibers enter the cord here

  19. Spinal Cord / Gray Matter • Dorsal Root Ganglia – Cell bodies of sensory neurons located here

  20. Spinal Cord / Gray Matter • Ventral Roots – Motor neurons leave the cord here

  21. Spinal Cord / Gray Matter • Spinal nerves – are formed from the fusion of the dorsal and ventral roots

  22. Spinal Cord / Gray Matter Spinal Nerves; 8 pairs of cervical nerves 12 pairs of thoracic nerves 5 pairs of lumbar nerves 5 pairs of sacral nerves 1 pair of coccygeal nerves

  23. Spinal Cord / White Matter • The anterior median fissure and the posterior median sulcus divide the spinal cord into R. and L. sides

  24. Spinal Cord / White Matter • White matter is divided into columns; Posterior Funiculus, Anterior Funiculus, and Lateral Funiculus

  25. Spinal Cord / White Matter • Each column contains distinct bundles of nerve axons called tracts

  26. Spinal Cord / White Matter Two Types of Tracts 1. Sensory (ascending) tracts – conduct nerve impulses toward the brain

  27. Spinal Cord / White Matter 2. Motor (descending) tracts – conduct impulses down the cord

  28. Connective Tissue Coverings of Spinal Nerves • A fiber is a single axon within an endoneurium

  29. Connective Tissue Coverings of Spinal Nerves • A fascicle is a bundle of fibers within a perineurium

  30. Connective Tissue Coverings of Spinal Nerves • A nerve is a bundle of fascicles within an epineurium

  31. Spinal Nerves and Nerve Plexus • Each nerve divides into dorsal and ventral rami

  32. Spinal Nerves and Nerve Plexus • Rami contains both motor and sensory rami

  33. Spinal Nerves and Nerve Plexus • Dorsal rami – serve the skin and musculture of the posterior body trunk at their approximate level of emergence

  34. Spinal Nerves and Nerve Plexus • Ventral rami of spinal nerves T2 –T12 – pass anteriorly to supply the muscles of intercostal spaces, and the skin and muscles of the anterior and lateral trunk

  35. Spinal Nerves and Nerve Plexus • Ventral rami of all other nerves – form complex networks of nerves called plexuses

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