FAQ Meds
L1 Eye
Question. You mention that dark acts as a stimulus for
rods and cones. So my question is
whether the ganglion cells that send info via the optic nerve are activated by
dark rather than light?
Answer: The off centre cells (i.e. those activated by a
black dot on a white page) are. The on center cells are not. We have not
covered why. But FYI, the on
center ganglion cells have an inhibitory connection between the center receptor
and the bipolar cell. The off center ganglion cells have an excitatory
connection.
L2 Visual Cortex
Question. In Session 2, the sentence reads:
"The LGN is composed of 6 layers. 3 receive info from one eye, 3 from the
other." I don't really understand
how each LGN (one on each lobe of the thalamus) receives input from BOTH eyes,
since the optic tracts from each eye aren't supposed to recombine until they
reach the primary visual cortex.
Answer: They do not combine onto the same neuron
until they reach the binocular cells in primary visual cortex. These cells are
located above and below layer 4 and are responsible for stereopsis.
Question. Does the medial temporal motion area
typically have more complex cells than the V1 area to allow for accurate
detection of motion? How do the larger
receptive fields of these cells in the MT allow for good detection of motion?
Answer: Try walking forward.
Notice how the scene is expanding around the point that you are walking toward.
That is a particular pattern of motion, one that fills the whole visual field.
Some neurons in this area are good at recognizing this particular pattern,
while other neurons specialize in other patterns.
L3 Association Cortex
Question. Does the what/where stream apply to
the other senses?
Answer: Probably. But these pathways have as yet not
been mapped.
Question. 1) Regarding neglect: with a lesion
in the right PTO, I can appreciate how the patient would be unable to
acknowledge the left hand side of an object because of the lack of ability to
attend. However, given the example of
"drawing the flower" in the notes, wouldn't the patient then realize,
after the fact, that he is unable to "see" the LHS of things, when he
reflects on how he has just drawn a half flower? I guess I don't fully understand the statement
"the patient is unaware that one half is gone . . .
"
Answer: Did you see the self
portraits by the patient with a right parietal lesion? Go to
http://www.med.uwo.ca/physiology/courses/medsweb/L3AssMem/LinksM3.htm
This is the same problem. This smart patient, a
neurologist, should have realized that he had missed drawing half his face. But
he didn't. For him the picture was complete, nothing was missing. Had someone
else added features to the other side, he would not have been aware of them.
Question. In your take home problems, you
mention that a right PTO lesion would cause you to neglect/be unaware of
objects to the left of you when looking at your bedroom. Would you also neglect the left side of
objects on your right?
Answer: Yes. If you attend to the room, you neglect one
side of the room. If you attend to an object in the room, you neglect one side
of the object.
Question. Clinically, how would a PTO lesion
be diagnosed, especially if there was a lesion of the left PTO (the ability to
attend is unaffected, in this case)?
Answer: A left sided lesion would be harder to spot.
But there are more sensitive tests, such as those that test for extinction.
Perhaps you will learn these next year.
Question. Is neglect purely visual? Or are all the senses affected? If so, how would neglect manifest in a tactile,
auditory manner?
Answer: Yes it applies to all senses. You neglect to
put socks on one foot because of neglect of one side of the body.
L4 Spinal Reflexes and
Muscles
Question. What
exactly is the benefit of the gamma drive?
Answer: It makes the spindles more sensitive.
Question. How is the
modulation of basic spinal reflexes of any benefit?
Answer: It lets the cortex adjust the sensitivity of the
reflex; e.g. to tune them down when your hand is relaxed, doing nothing.
Question. Would it
be fair to say that both the monosynaptic reflex and the golgi tendon organ reflex also work to maintain basic
muscle tone?
Answer: One controls a limb’s position and movement.
The other controls how much force is generated. True that
both ultimately affect the muscle firing rate and thus tone, but their goals
are different.
L5 Motor Cortex
Question. On pg 4., the notes show that the ventral corticospinal
tract is "bilateral & polysynaptic," yet in our neuroanatomy class, our notes show that this spinal tract
is monosynaptic, just like the lateral corticospinal
tract. Which is correct (or are they
both)?
Answer: I believe I am.
Question. The origin of the fibers for the lateral corticospinal
tract shows 1/3 premotor, 1/3 motor, and 1/3 sensory cortex. Does this also apply to the ventral tract?
Answer: As indicated in the notes, the ventral tract
originates from premotor and motor. The precise ratio is not important.
Question. Regarding
the columnar organization of cells that influence a particular muscle, I don't
really understand how 1 "motor cell" in the cortex can be distributed
to many cells (top figure, p.5), when I thought that each muscle has 1
dedicated cell in each column (thus stipulating that each motor cell affects
only 1 lower motor neuron path - direct to that 1 muscle).
Answer: The axon divides and each branch makes contact
with several spinal motor neurons (as is shown in the diagram).
Question. What
happens to the spinal monosynaptic stretch reflex response when the cortical
long loop response is not available (i.e. in the case of a stroke)?
Answer: It becomes more sensitive to Ia
input. That is why the reflexes become more pronounced; hyper-reflexive.
L6 Cerebellum and Basal
Ganglia
Question. How are
the resting tremors generated in the patient with Parkinson's?
Answer: No one knows for sure, but the prevailing view is
that a group of neurons in the basal ganglia produce a rhythmic activity.
Question. When
you indicated that the "deficits were ipsilateral" on page 5 of your
notes, were you referring to all of the deficits discussed on that page?
Answer: Yes. All
Question. Why do
the symptoms of cerebellar disease improve with time if the cerebellum is the
"repair shop" and it is being affected? (p. 13 of the notes)
Answer: Good
question. Perhaps the cerebellum is itself flexible. When one part is damaged
other parts can do the repair
Question. Given the
deficits in the basal ganglia, I figured that the patient would have intention
tremors, because of difficulty in initiating/halting movements.
Answer: I agree, it would seem so. But they do not.
L7 Auditory
Question. On page 5,
for the figure at the bottom of the page, I understand what is included in the
chart (frequency of sound heard vs. loudness heard), but I don't understand
what the arrows represent.
Answer: The arrows represent that the high frequency
end is to the left on the basilar membrane and on the right in the chart. It is
the opposite for low frequencies.
Question. On page 7,
for the figure, will there also be a pathway activated (ipsilaterally)
to the input from the right side (only the decussation to the left side is shown)?
Answer: Yes there is a mirror symmetric circuit on the
opposite side.
L8 Vestibular
Question. In one of your lectures you asked a
question: What semicircular canals change their activity when you tilt your
head forward?
I thought your otolith organs would
change when you tilt your head forward because they sense gravity.
Answer: You are right. The otolith will be activated
because they do sense the direction of gravity.
But
tilting you head is a rotation. This will also activate the canals.
Question. What are you referring to as the
pulse and step in your wave forms charts with the saccade and VOR movements.
Answer: The pulse is what turns your eyes, the phasic
activity.
The
step is what holds your eyes in their new position, the tonic activity from the
PPH.
Question. You mention that a lesion in the PPH
can lead to nystagmus in both directions.
What if only the left PPH is lesioned?
Then in the case of saccading to the right,
would there still be drifting back to centre?
Answer: Don't worry about that. It won't be on the
exam. But FYI the answer is that the PPH is a bilateral structure. Lesioning one side affects the
operation of the other. There is however a change in the settling point. In a
bilateral lesion the eye drifts towards centre. In a unilateral lesion the eye
drifts to a settling point to one side.
Question. With
regards to an imbalance in the VOR (resulting in nystagmus), the notes read
that "normally, vestibular afferents have a TONIC drive". I thought they had a phasic drive, hence the
necessity for the PPH to convert this to a tonic drive?
Answer: The hair cells fire even when stationary (i.e.
tonic). Moving will increase or decrease this firing rate (the phasic
response). PPH converts the latter to a tonic drive (i.e. a big phasic response
results in a big tonic response).
In
short there are two tonic drives. Each is responsible for a different type of
nystagmus.
Question. Does a blind person become dizzy?
Answer: Yes. Suppose a blind person
turned round and round until his cupola sprang back with normal upright
position. Now his vestibular system sensed that he was stationary. If then he
suddenly stopped moving, his cupola would be displaced by the fluid and he would
incorrectly sense that he was turning in the opposite direction. He would have
a sense of imbalance. He would feel dizzy.
Question. Is a blind person susceptible to motion
sickness?
Answer: I am not sure. Certainly there
would be no visual to conflict with vestibular signals. There are reports that if one closes one’s
eyes, one becomes less susceptible to motion sickness. But I am not aware of
any scientific evidence for this.
L9 Touch