Subject: Anatomy and Physiology
Our affective or emotional brain is called the limbic system. The medial portion or border of each cerebral hemisphere and diencephalon are referred to as limbic, which is a border.
The limbic system has an impact on mood, feelings of pain and pleasure, emotions, and the visceral reactions to those emotions. The amygdala and the anterior section of the cingulate gyrus appear to be two areas that are particularly significant in emotions. The amount of memory storage is influenced by the hippocampus. Together, the olfactory nuclei and the amygdaloid nuclear complex aid in evoking the emotional reactions to both pleasant and unpleasant odors.
The spinal cord serves as a conduit for information between the brain and the PNS below the head. It is crucial to the nervous system's overall functionality.
The spinal cord runs from the foramen magnum to the level of the first lumbar vertebra, where it is contained within the vertebral canal. About 45 centimeters is how long the cord is. It has a cylindrical shape, a slight anteroposterior flattening, and enlargements in the cervical and lumbar regions, which are where the nerves feeding the upper and lower limbs begin. The fibrous connective tissue known as the filum terminale surrounds the inferior end of the spinal cord and anchors it to the coccyx. The cauda equina is a grouping of lower lumbar, sacral, and coccygeal nerves that includes the filum terminale and is located beneath the spinal cord.
The gray matter (nerve cell bodies) that makes up the spinal cord's small, irregularly shaped interior region is surrounded by a greater area of white matter (nerve cell fibers). Two horns made of gray matter are organized. A thicker anterior (ventral) horn and a thinner posterior (dorsal) horn make up each half of the central gray matter. The cross section of the gray matter resembles an H due to these two horns. Cerebrospinal fluid is located in a tiny canal called the central canal that runs through the middle of the gray matter. A spinal nerve emerges from each side of the spinal cord in each segment. Through two nerve roots—the dorsal and ventral nerve roots—each spinal nerve joins the cord. The ventral root carries motor processes out from the cord, while the dorsal root carries sensory nerve processes to the spinal cord. Thousands of nerve cell fibers are organized in three areas outside of the gray matter on each side to make up the white matter.
The ascending tracts, which carry sensory impulses to the brain, and the descending tracts, which carry motor impulses from the brain to the spinal nerves at various levels of the cord, are two different types of bundles of axons found within the white matter of the spinal cord. The sensory and motor pathways in the spinal cord and the brain are interconnected.
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