1 / 86

Brain Anatomy and Physiology

Brain Anatomy and Physiology. Dr. Nevo Margalit – Neurosurgery Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center. Scalp. Skin Connective tissue (superficial fascia) Epicranial aponeurosis (galea aponeurotica) Loose areolar tissue Pericranium Occipitofrontalis muscle. Scalp. The Skull. The Skull.

jrosalind
Télécharger la présentation

Brain Anatomy and Physiology

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Brain Anatomy and Physiology Dr. Nevo Margalit – Neurosurgery Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center

  2. Scalp • Skin • Connective tissue (superficial fascia) • Epicranial aponeurosis (galea aponeurotica) • Loose areolar tissue • Pericranium • Occipitofrontalis muscle

  3. Scalp

  4. The Skull

  5. The Skull

  6. The skull

  7. The MeningsThe 3 layers covering the brain • Dura: covers the brain and spinal cord. The venous sinuses run through the dura. 2 additional Parts of the dura are the Tentorium and the Falx Cerebri. • Arachnoid: Transparent, thin web structure. Creates a space around the brain called the sub arachnoid space where the CSF and the main blood vessels pass. • Pia: a very thin layer. Coats the brain and spinal cord and is inseparable from them.

  8. Dura

  9. Tentorium and Falx

  10. Tentorium

  11. Arachnoid

  12. Arachnoid – Basal Cisterns

  13. Parts of the Central Nervous System • 2 hemispheres • Brainstem • Cerebellum • Spinal cord

  14. Frontal lobe Parietal lobe Temporal lobe Occipital lobe Insular lobe Limbic lobe Each hemisphere has lobes:

  15. Lateral View

  16. Insula

  17. Gyruses and sulci • Each lobe is composed of gyruses separated by sulci • The topography can be defined by histology, anatomical relationships or function

  18. MapBrodmann

  19. Gyruses and Sulci

  20. Functional areas

  21. Function 2

  22. Function 3

  23. f-MRI

  24. The Motor Strip

  25. Fibers

  26. Ventricles and CSF

  27. Ventricles and CSF • CSF is produced by the choroid plexus in the ventricles • The circulation is from the lateral ventricles to the third through the Monroe- aqueduct- IV ventricle- sub arachnoid space in skull and spine- absorption in sss and other sinuses through arachnoid granulations

  28. CSF Pathways

  29. CSF Pathways

  30. Arteries of the brain

  31. Arteries of the brain • Anterior circulation – internal carotid artery, from common carotid in the neck. Bifurcates to MCA and ACA • Posterior circulation – vertebral arteries that join to form the basilar artery that will then bifurcate to 2 PCA

  32. Circle of Willis • Communication between 2 sides – anterior communicating (a-com) • Communication between anterior and posterior circulation – posterior communicating (p-com) • Many anomalies may exist

  33. Arteries in the neck

  34. Arteries in the subarachnoid space

  35. Arteries of the brain

  36. Physiology

  37. Blood supply to the brain • The brain gets 15% of the cardiac output and 20% of the oxygen consumption • The brain tissue gets in average 50ml of blood per 100gr of tissue per minute. The gray matter receives about 3 to 4 times more then the white matter • Total blood supply to the brain is about 500-600ml per minute

  38. Factors Affecting the blood supply • Autoregulation • Biochemical changes – O2 and CO2 • Blood brain barrier- BBB

  39. Autoregulation • Maintains a regular blood supply to the brain in changing blood pressures • The range is 50-130 mm mercury • Possible mechanisms are the myogenic control, neurogenic and biochemichal control

  40. CO2 • The most important and powerful mechanism that controls brain blood flow • A change in 1mm PCO2 changes the flow in 4-5% • PCO2 of 70 gives a maximal vasodilatation. Above that the flow is pressure dependent

  41. Hyperventilation • Hyperventilation lowers the PCO2 • It has a strong effect but it is limited in time • Could be dangerous if not regulated- ischemia • Can be regulated with a jugular bulb oximeter

  42. BLOOD BRAIN BARRIER • The BBB is composed of the tight junctions in the endothelium cells of the blood vessels • Prevents passage of large molecules and even small ions like Na and Cl • Specific substances pass the BBB like glucose and amino acids

  43. BLOOD BRAIN BARRIER • Because of the BBB, in the brain hydrostatic and oncotic pressures are not significant. The important parameter is the osmotic pressure • The BBB is damages in trauma, tumor, infarct, SAH and infection

  44. BLOOD BRAIN BARRIER

  45. Brainstem and Cranial Nerves

  46. Brain stem • Has 3 parts: midbrain, pons and medulla • Transports all the information to and from the brain • Centers for breathing and blood pressure • The origin or endpoint for cranial nerves • Contains the center of consciousness • Creates connections to the cerebellum

More Related