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00:05 more than you all man. It hard to be alert on a thursday

00:11 , isn't it? So what do guys think of the reading? Was

00:17 tough? Was it hard to get this stuff kind of sort of?

00:23 . Alright. What we're gonna try do today is try to make sense

00:27 much of the reading. Okay, not gonna pretend like plexus is are

00:31 because they're they're not so part of job here is to make it as

00:36 as possible for us and number two to get rid of the stuff that

00:41 think is unnecessary for a freshman level . Alright. A lot of the

00:45 , whenever you see stuff in anatomy , you gotta remember sometimes the authors

00:49 sitting there, they're giddy about what writing, you know Gideon, the

00:52 of like, hey, I get talk about the stuff I'm interested in

00:55 then they throw stuff that's way above heads. Alright, that will happen

00:59 I know what I do to my writing and so it's not surprising that

01:03 textbook does this as well. All , so today, what we're gonna

01:07 is we're going to look at the of a spinal nerve and what the

01:10 of a spinal nerve is and then we're gonna do is we're going to

01:13 move into back into the central nervous , so remember what I said early

01:18 said nerves are part of the peripheral system and so we're going to just

01:25 with that portion of the peripheral nervous in terms of organization And then we're

01:29 jump back into the central nervous system we're gonna look at the structures that

01:33 found within the cerebrum and the structures are found within the midbrain. Excuse

01:39 . The brain stem, not the . Alright. And so are starting

01:43 . As I said, if we're be talking about spinal nerves, we

01:46 to understand general organization. Alright. we learned on Tuesday, we talked

01:53 the spinal cord, which I said reason they probably talked about it first

01:56 so that they could get to And so if you think about the

01:58 cord, remember we had gray matter we had white matter, right?

02:02 had a place that on the top the gray matter which we called the

02:06 horn. And on the bottom we the ventral horn and over there on

02:11 side we had the lateral horn. so if you look at our little

02:15 up here, you can see those . Sorry, probably should turn that

02:22 . Alright, So here's dorsal here's ventral horn and over here on

02:25 lateral horn. And we said in gray matter, that's where we're gonna

02:29 the cell bodies of the nerves that found, or the neurons that are

02:34 inside the spinal cord. And so coming in is going to terminate.

02:41 other words, their acts on terminals going to terminate on the cell bodies

02:45 here in the dorsal horn neurons that going to send signals are going to

02:52 out here in the ventral horn. if their autonomic, they're going to

02:54 over there in the lateral horn. so that's part of the reason why

02:57 talk all of this, because those the cell bodies. And we said

03:00 with the neuron we have a cell . We have a bunch of

03:03 And then we also have and start letter A into the letter in has

03:09 X. O. In the Yeah, Excellent. I'm glad you

03:14 the X. And you're in the order. I was going to go

03:17 all right, Those axons that are the motor, the motor neurons,

03:24 leave out through the gray matter and they leave via these structures called

03:31 The sensory neurons coming in that are up here in the dorsal horn are

03:38 the spinal cord via another route. so we have names for them.

03:43 , these routes coming in are going be the dorsal root. The roots

03:48 out are the ventral route and they together and they form what is called

03:51 spinal nerve. So, our organization quite simple. If you start off

03:56 , right, I'm the spinal that's easy. And then that next

04:01 over is called the root. And on whether you're coming in or going

04:06 whether your sensory or motor, it's dorsal root or the ventral route.

04:12 in between because the roots are pretty and then they get bigger when they're

04:18 they converge and join and form that nerve, there's actually smaller. Itsy

04:23 tiny structures that are bundles of neurons together and those are called root.

04:29 alright, but we don't name the , let's there there. But if

04:33 were to look at it, you be going, oh here I have

04:36 spinal cord that I have roots. go spinal cord route, let's to

04:39 and then route, let's or routes to nerve, see how that

04:44 . Alright, So the dorsal root always the indoor, the ventral is

04:52 the out if I'm coming in, sending information into the central nervous

04:57 That means that information is sensory, always sensory information coming out is always

05:03 be going down to parts of the . That means it's always motor.

05:08 , So those are the two characteristics you have coming in. And then

05:11 you converge, a spinal nerve is to consist of both sensory and motor

05:18 , Right? So it convert its a highway, right? So you

05:20 think like this when the highway is together, like we see down here

05:24 59 or anywhere else in this in city, the highway is side by

05:28 , traffic is traveling right next to other. But you move out of

05:32 city a little ways and you end with a median, don't you?

05:36 . And so that you can kind think about that. That's kind of

05:38 our median. Not really. But kind of like that. Now,

05:43 you look at this, you see big old fat thing sitting on the

05:46 that's called the dorsal root ganglia. central neurons are bipolar neurons in the

05:54 that their cell body sits off to side. They have those long

05:57 So you have an axle that comes and then you have an axon portion

06:01 goes into the central nervous system and portion that goes down to wherever it

06:06 receiving information. So, structurally they're than what we've been looking at.

06:11 if you go back to that we talked about the different types of

06:13 , You can go and look and , oh, it's is this is

06:16 bipolar? But we call it I bipolar, excuse me, back it

06:21 . Cross off the by put Uni polar. This is a uni

06:26 uh neurons. All right. And it's it's slightly different than those multipolar

06:32 in terms of structure. And that body is going to be found in

06:35 peripheral nervous system and sits over in structure here called that dorsal root

06:41 All right. So, our starting today simply put spinal cord from the

06:46 , you go to the root. from the route leads to the root

06:48 the root to the nerve. We're do this cadence over and over and

06:52 again. All right. You can't the route. Let's on this

06:55 They don't have them there. I the eyes going what now? It's

06:59 and they're not in the picture. can't draw them. All right.

07:04 , so bodies are we're terminating on neurons are terminating here. The neurons

07:09 originating that our motor. Remember? are somatic. Those are autonomic up

07:14 in the lateral. That's right. got to press the button over

07:21 All right. So, spinal cord to routes routes to nerves and then

07:27 nerves have the nerve to divide Into little branches. Okay, now,

07:36 only gonna care really about one of branches, but you need to know

07:40 the branches are the first branch we're ignore. All right. These are

07:43 Raymond communications and you can see them here. We're gonna ignore them for

07:46 now because they're going to come back when we talk about the autonomic nervous

07:51 . So, it's better to ignore now and make it less confusing for

07:54 . And let's focus on the other . The easy one of the other

07:59 is called the dorsal ramus. dorsal Remember? Heads to the

08:04 That's really, really simple dorsal rami the neurons that inter vacate the skin

08:09 the muscles of the back. So, the fact that you're sitting

08:14 is a function of the dorsal rami multiple spinal nerves along the length of

08:20 spinal cord, right? The fact you can feel somebody walking their fingers

08:25 your back is a function of that that are formed via the dorsal

08:31 And in our little cartoon up here can see it's like here's the dorsal

08:35 and you can see it goes off and by the way, if you

08:38 at these and you see names that anterior post area, that's just because

08:41 forgot to change them. But dorsal posterior are the same words, ventral

08:47 anterior the same words. And you see in the in the cartoon it

08:51 post here Raymond. So here it and there's a big old chunk of

08:55 , chunk of meat in your Is a starts with an M.

09:01 you. So there you go. a muscle and you can see the

09:05 fibers going in there. You can see they're supposed to be like oh

09:08 it's going up to the skin so can feel the things on your

09:11 All right. And then the last is the eventual ramos. Alright.

09:19 Ventral Ramos or Anterior Ramus is the that becomes the important one. This

09:25 the one that forms all the name of the body. Right? So

09:33 there's gonna be named nerves that go the back. Alright and go to

09:36 skin but everywhere else in your body going to be the result of that

09:42 going on. And then dividing and things throughout your body. All

09:48 So, the spinal nerve eventual ramos continues on and outward. And then

09:53 a whole bunch of different things. splits and divides and reorganize itself through

09:58 processes become those name nerves. starting all over again, we're gonna

10:03 back to back to the picture. just a second, we start off

10:06 a spinal cord from the spinal We go to the route leads from

10:09 route leads to the roots, There's a dorsal adventure one from the

10:13 to the spinal nerve spinal nerve splits dorsal ramus, ventral ramos. And

10:19 remote communications were ignoring remote communications right , we said the dorsal really,

10:25 basic the back muscles and the skin the back. So ventral is where

10:30 at so far. So good. , drawing it. You want me

10:35 say it again? You want to through the go through it all

10:38 You might as well just come up a song for it, right?

10:42 not clever enough to do that. some of you are alright,

10:45 starting off with the spinal cord, nerves that the fibers that come out

10:50 first thing you're going to see a . Let's root. Let's converge to

10:53 roots. Roots converge to form the nerve, the spinal nerve divides and

11:00 the dorsal ramus which is the back the skin of the back muscles of

11:04 back and the skin of the The remote community can ignore for now

11:10 , see that would have worked if could have just gotten the Yeah.

11:14 grandma communications, what is that? going to be for for something we're

11:18 deal with later. It's going to dealing with the autonomic nervous system.

11:21 ignore it. And then the next is the ventral ramos, which is

11:26 to deal with basically what the spinal become. These name nerves that are

11:32 we're interested in. Now, we've about this a little bit already and

11:41 just going to reiterate the point is the nerves in your body are organized

11:46 the length of your body. In words, if you were to look

11:49 how nerves are are are created. not just a bunch of wires that

11:54 jammed in your body, like we do. And whenever we build

11:58 it's just just shove them in There's a there's a real clear organization

12:03 that when you're looking at the portion the spinal cord, you can say

12:07 portion of the spinal cord or what of the body does this, this

12:11 of the spinal cord. What does inter vacate. And so it matches

12:16 a topographical way. So the higher you are, the higher up you

12:20 in the body. The lower you in the spinal cord, the lower

12:23 are in the body. And so just kind of a big giant map

12:26 of showing you this right? So nerves that give rise to the nerves

12:32 the upper limbs are gonna be found part of that cervical enlargement. If

12:36 don't remember the cervical enlargement was that the last thing we said in

12:39 That's when your brain's turned off. you're like he's talking over the end

12:43 the class time. And so I to go home and still my brain

12:46 turned off right? And it was there's two parts of the spinal

12:49 They get wider. One is the enlargement. That's where the nerve fibers

12:54 going down to the upper limbs. a lumbar enlargement. And well,

12:58 are the where the fibers originate that down into the legs. But

13:02 you can see there's a specific If I'm innovating within the region of

13:08 chest and the and the abdominal The fibers are gonna originate at the

13:12 cord in that region. And just of wrap themselves around. All

13:17 So they follow a topographical organization. terms that we use to describe this

13:25 organization is called a derma tone and maya tone. All right. And

13:31 the color coding over here. And don't need to know what goes where

13:34 that's not important. There's always that . I'm gonna memorize this. What

13:38 derma tone is. Is the area skin supplied supplying sensory receptors that then

13:45 going to be sent to the spinal . In that specific locale via a

13:51 spinal nerve. I can't read So All right, so right up

13:54 here, we have the super clever nerves. I'm just pointing at

13:59 Alright, so, that should be to remember. I mean not in

14:02 of but clavicle. So supra means the clavicle. So, you can

14:06 of see it's right here. And do those fibers go? Well,

14:11 going and innovating the muscles above the And they enter in and go directly

14:19 this region around c. two, . 3 and c. four.

14:23 right. So, you can see not like oh, I'm gonna send

14:26 fibers way down and do the second . It's just gonna stick right about

14:29 it is. So, that would this is part of the maya

14:32 You can see what sensory nerves, areas Are going to be innovated.

14:37 , for the areas between c. and c. two looks like

14:43 Three and C. Four. So . Three, C. Four would

14:45 just up in here. All so that would be where that simulation

14:50 going is directly into the spinal cord that area. So the derma tone

14:55 the maya tone reflect where the fibers and where the fibers go from a

15:02 region in the spinal cord. Now is where it got nasty in the

15:12 . I bet all that other stuff there we just described is pretty

15:15 You can probably draw it out. , here's my spinal cord spinal cord

15:18 to route. Let's, here's my . Alright. My roots for my

15:21 , my nerves divide and go from Raymond Raymond Raymond communication and then something

15:27 happens. I'm ignoring that. I'm this. I'm now here and I'm

15:32 a plexus. What the heck is plexus? The answer is, you

15:37 know you've experienced it. You live every day when you drive in

15:44 right? You get into these regions right around 6:10 and all of a

15:49 you have highways going here going there you're trying to figure out which lane

15:53 I get in? If you drive on 288, you're relearning traffic.

15:59 you got anyone here drive down to to get back home? Yeah.

16:02 it fun when they switch the left to the right exit and you find

16:07 like creating across four lanes of traffic get to where you need to

16:11 And it's fun? You're driving along now in my brain at least because

16:14 drive down to 88 it's like, , I know what to do and

16:16 it's just fun watching that That semi that pickup truck trying desperately to get

16:21 four lanes, You know over that dirt median as they're trying desperately to

16:27 their way to 6:10. It's basically traffic nightmare. It's basically different pathways

16:35 send fibers to and from one part the body to the other from basically

16:39 the spinal cord to the other part the body. Now. I want

16:42 to envision for a moment where you right now and I want you to

16:46 your path, your normal path. get to school every day. Can

16:50 can you picture in your mind what they're your before you got in your

16:55 ? You got smart and you actually looked on your phone, you picked

16:58 ways and you said what's the best to go? And it said,

17:02 by the way, there's this massive that's going to delay you six hours

17:06 that's how it works in Houston. ? That's going to delay you six

17:09 to get to your exam. If use your normal pathway, Can you

17:13 your alternate pathway already? Yeah. right. The plexus is a way

17:21 your body to send fibers to same via different pathways. It's basically the

17:28 up of those nerve fibers crisscross scheme that you can have an alternate path

17:33 if you look at this picture which very very confusing. You can kind

17:37 see that. So I'm just gonna at one here's C. Two,

17:40 can see a fiber branch off the to converge with fibers and C.

17:45 . And then off they go to something else. All right. In

17:49 words, if I'm sending a signal this pathway, I may be sending

17:54 signal up to C. Two, may be sending it to see three

17:57 upon which fiber is it's traveling Right. Something here, that's a

18:02 bit better name here. Remember we at the super club vehicular nerves,

18:07 the super curriculum that super navicular. you can see right here Those nerves

18:13 made up of fibers that come from . four as well as from

18:16 three. So there are different regions the spinal cord that are responsible for

18:22 the exact same spot. So if were to say damage, say one

18:28 those pathways, then there's still a that a nerve fiber is coming to

18:33 from those particular locales. It's not basically cutting you off from receiving or

18:41 input to a particular location, just there are multiple ways to get between

18:45 and your home and vice versa. ? There are multiple ways because of

18:52 plexus is plexus I guess plexus to and receive information between the central nervous

18:59 and the locale being innovated. All now, that's what all this garbage

19:07 there says, right, you're not all the text, You're looking at

19:12 picture, you're looking at me. right now what ends up arising as

19:16 result of all the crisscrossing that's taking are those named nerves that we're interested

19:21 ? Alright. And there's four main is that you need to know All

19:27 now, in saying that I'm not hit you over the head with a

19:30 and saying, okay, you've got know every nerve that comes out of

19:33 . You don't need to know which uh spinal regions are going to give

19:37 to which nerves. That's that's just when you agree, just nod your

19:42 and of course that's just mean. . But what we need to do

19:45 first you need to know what generally does each plexus uh innovate.

19:51 And so we're going to see And these are just the four main

19:54 , there's others in the body and the other ones that I'm gonna point

19:57 specific nerves, I think you should . Alright. And really the what

20:01 asking in that case is what are innovating? What do they do?

20:05 , so before we get to that , we need to understand that not

20:10 spinal nerves are going to enter and a plexus. Alright. We have

20:15 group of nerves, spinal nerves that what are called the intercostal nerves.

20:21 the intercostal nerves, That's a real thing, you can look at them

20:24 say what does that mean enter is between, Right? So when you

20:29 inter think between and then costal refers ribs. So these are the between

20:35 rib nerves. So you can so you can kind of think. Alright

20:39 I understand that the body is topographically and the names of the nerves are

20:43 between the nerves then it's basically all nerves that lie in the thoracic

20:48 And that's actually what it is. basically the thoracic nerves. With the

20:52 of T. One T. One a role in forming part of a

20:57 . But you can keep it simple say to yourself, all the thoracic

21:01 for the most part do not form . Is instead what they do is

21:06 form the intercostal nerves. And you see right here. Um I think

21:09 can kind of see yes, here's posterior ramus of the dorsal ramus.

21:14 can't really see the remote communications in but it's in there. Just trust

21:17 . And then what you have here is that the eventual ramos and then

21:20 just becomes come around and you just to it as a intercostal nerve.

21:26 see follows the rules that we already right from nerve to Remy posterior Remy

21:35 which were ignoring. And then here that anterior or eventual ramos forming the

21:41 nerve. So I just pointed a of these out t to that you're

21:47 the ticklish nerve. That's the one under the arm. Alright. Alright

21:50 you're ticklish and someone pokes you under army. Mhm. That's T.

21:55 right along the sides. T. T. Six. And then

21:59 when you get a little bit lower . Seven and lower, you're now

22:02 about the abdominal region. Okay, they're coming down and innovating the muscles

22:06 the abdomen. Innovating the muscles. me? The skin of the

22:12 Why aren't they intervening the ones in back? Do you remember? Let's

22:18 back over here, eventual ramos goes this way over here, dorsal

22:25 What does it innovate? It's getting , skin and muscles of the

22:31 Alright. It doesn't matter where you up here, down here, skin

22:35 muscles of the back, mm These horrible pictures when you saw this

22:45 , Did you just get past it you read it? Yeah, one

22:49 gets the other person. This is of complex and really what this

22:54 is kind of what you would do you were to look at a picture

22:58 a plexus? Right? So, is the cervical plexus. If I

23:03 back to slides, this is the plexus, which would you rather

23:10 Does this look easy to draw to ? No. Does this look like

23:14 probably easier to draw if you're trying organizing it for yourself. Yeah,

23:17 basically connecting the dots. So, of the dots in each of these

23:21 little maps represents that ventral ramus exiting the spinal nerve. All right.

23:29 so what we're doing now is we're the question of where do the criss

23:32 go? All right, that's all artist has done. And so you

23:38 imagine you could do the same thing you started with this picture right here

23:42 said okay if I had to memorize again notice I'm not asking to do

23:45 . But it said if I had memorize all the nerves that came out

23:47 this plexus, including all the minor and the sub minor nerves and all

23:52 stuff you could draw going ok what do I know that comes out

23:56 C. One? What do I that comes out of C. Two

23:58 yada yada. I want you to up with is something that looks something

24:01 this. Alright. It's just a anyone here ever been to a city

24:07 Washington D. C. New york London where you've had to drop get

24:12 the subway and they have the subway and you sit there and stare at

24:15 for a second. It's a whole of colors and a whole bunch of

24:17 and a whole bunch of dots. ? What do those represent?

24:22 It's just a representation of the you the transit map of the area,

24:30 ? It has it doesn't match length doesn't tell you exactly how far you

24:34 to travel. It just kind of , oh if I get on the

24:36 line here I can travel the blue ? Get off here and get on

24:39 red line and the red line will me to wherever I need to

24:42 Just as an example, that's kind what this is. It's like,

24:45 , all the colors represent the different , the ventral Remy originating at that

24:52 location. So cervical one through cervical . Right? And then it's asking

24:56 I crisscross and merge, converge, do I get? So that's how

25:01 look at this. And if that's complicated, that's okay, let's get

25:05 where we really want to go. is to understand which nerves are important

25:10 us to know. So, these you're dealing with the cervical plexus,

25:14 dealing with the superficial next structures. muscles are attached to your hyoid

25:20 Do you remember the hyoid is It's in the throat helps you to

25:26 the surface of your neck. Point your neck. Good. Excellent.

25:32 anatomy is easy, right? And the lower portions of the heads point

25:36 your head, That's your head. where are the lower portions? It's

25:39 in this region. Alright, so cervical is basically this. Okay,

25:46 what you're looking at the areas that surrounding this region. So we have

25:56 basic branches here. When you hear cutaneous refers to surface to the

26:03 So if I'm dealing with cutaneous, I dealing with movement or am I

26:08 with feeling? do you think All right. So, when you

26:11 that word cutaneous, that's probably what word is actually referring to.

26:16 these are nerves of the skin in very particular areas and then we have

26:21 muscular branch. The muscular branch tells dealing with the muscles in this

26:27 So, again, it's dealing with cervical area, right? So the

26:32 , right in here, and we kind of see what we have.

26:36 right. So, you can see gonna point here and you can see

26:39 are three of the nerves that we're at. There is a regular occipital

26:43 cervical, occipital, regular cervical. right. Down here, here's super

26:48 vehicular, which is named there, we've already talked about. And then

26:51 have the muscular branch. So, the muscular nerve and there's the frantic

26:56 . All right. And it's just you how they're formed. And I'm

26:59 interested in you knowing specifically how they're , if you're sitting over a

27:04 guess what, you'd have to know they're formed, Right? So,

27:08 you're dealing with an anatomy lab and learning these structures, it's about where

27:14 are more than than what they But because we only have a map

27:18 you don't get to dig your hands a dead body? That's what whatever

27:22 right? You don't get to see these things are? So, let's

27:27 what they're actually doing? All So occipital We'll remember where occipital

27:33 the occipital portion of your bone is here. So, when we're talking

27:38 the occipital nerve is dealing with the scalp. All right, down in

27:42 region. A regular, the oracle your ear. We haven't learned that

27:48 . So, the auricular nerve deals with the skin around the oracle and

27:53 external auditory meet us, which is fancy word for saying the canal that

27:58 into your head, through your So when you hear that, feel

28:00 little itch inside your ear. There go. A regular nerve cervical

28:07 that's the skin of the anterior Alright, So, right in

28:12 Super claw, vehicular skin of the regions. Like I said right

28:16 So, you can just feel that or whatever along the lines with regard

28:20 the muscular branches, muscular nerves deals the muscles of the throat.

28:25 So within the within the throat as , the frantic nerve deals with primarily

28:30 diaphragm and regulates breathing. Okay, , it's what allows you to do

28:39 All right, spending and helping youtube the upper portions of the thoracic cage

28:49 that the five Nerds you need to from the cervical plexus Near the cervical

28:56 and the most complicated of the plexus the brachial plexus. All right.

29:02 had to add stuff in here to it easier for you. I'm just

29:05 show you if you go online and up the brake. Kill plexus.

29:10 picture right here is what you'll Okay. And the problem with this

29:15 why it's so complicated is because it , separates, chris rock crosses,

29:21 and does this multiple times. So different regions that you need to be

29:25 of aware of. All right. what we say is there's five levels

29:28 organization. So when you get into ramus, what you can see

29:32 remember each of these represents those individual coming out of that are coming out

29:39 the ramos and then the ramus is in and they form what are called

29:44 . And you get three trunks. right. So what I've tried to

29:47 is I've used the circle to show where the trunks are. Alright,

29:50 we have a superior trunk. We a middle trunk and an inferior

29:54 Now, whenever you have a name superior, inferior lateral, whatever,

29:57 always a reference point. And so reference point here is blood vessels that

30:02 traveling down the center of your And so there's kind of referring to

30:08 structure and then their relative to All right. But you can see

30:13 is that the Remy are converging There's no convergence here. There is

30:18 convergence. All right. And then after the convergence the fibers crisscrossing the

30:25 and they formed divisions. So you from a ramus to a trunk,

30:28 trunk to a division. And what end up with those two divisions,

30:31 an anterior and posterior division. And again I've tried to make it

30:36 The box represents the anterior, the line represents posterior. So here you

30:41 anterior posterior from the inferior trunk, have the anterior post area from the

30:47 trunk. And then you have the and the posterior from the superior

30:52 And then once you get those uh individual fibers you see that they come

30:59 and they form sorry, they form are called chords. It's like

31:05 So just another one. And again chords are relative to the axillary

31:09 So now you have posterior, medial lateral. And then from there that's

31:13 they branch out again and they form name nerves of the of the upper

31:18 . And so the little triangles here here to represent those chords. So

31:23 can kind of see here there's kind this, you know converge separate,

31:27 separate. Converge separate. That's why complicated. Was there a hand

31:34 Yeah, go ahead this right. they represent this is supposed to be

31:44 ventral ramos represented. The dot represents it's where it's originating from. So

31:51 portion which portion of the spinal So you can say if this is

31:55 remi then at some point when this probably the better part where you can

32:01 here's the rain was coming together, ramos coming together that right there is

32:04 that trunk. And if you look it, you say, well wait

32:07 second. Here's here's a frantic Well, remember we saw the french

32:10 as part of the cervical. what about these nerves are here?

32:14 , again, they're part of the plexus. So the person who maps

32:19 including thing, start seeing fibers that actually parts of other plexi. That's

32:25 part of that criss crossing. Like , here's the intercostal nerve from where

32:29 said, T one plays a role forming the intercostal nerve but it also

32:34 a role in forming the break of . And so they're just mapping that

32:38 for for your viewing pleasure. All , But this is the ramus over

32:45 . This is probably a better If you're if you want to try

32:48 map that, you can kind of here here, is that ramos right

32:53 , you can see the formation of trunk here, C five and C

32:56 coming together, C seven's by C. Eight and T. One

33:02 together, forming that inferior. And a separation. So, really there's

33:08 posterior, here's the anterior posterior anterior anterior then convergence. Now reforming

33:19 Now again, two dimensional single colored . A lot harder to do when

33:23 sitting there with a probe and you're here holding one and you're like,

33:27 , let me see now, I see the relationship to each other.

33:31 your job is not to memorize the your to memorize and understand this is

33:38 organized. So maybe I should understand a true trunk is formed from Remy

33:44 divide and then they come back together form chords. That would be to

33:49 benefit. All right, but not doing which at this point? So

33:58 going to look at these five major of 1234 and I think that one

34:04 the fifth one. No, it's . Not pectoral nerves. All

34:08 So it's actually the median nerve is here and so you can see the

34:11 is kind of screwed with us because put this here way down there when

34:16 would have liked it out over here place. So what do I need

34:20 know from the brachial plexus? What ? Five simple nerves, axillary,

34:25 cutaneous, radio media and owner And what they do is basically if

34:30 looking at the axillary nerve, where the axillary region? Right receives sensory

34:35 input from the inside of the So just like the cervical, it's

34:40 a portion of information from that from axillary region, muscular cutaneous sensory input

34:50 the lateral forearm as well as entire muscles. So what's your anterior versus

34:57 anterior posterior right radial nerve is going move alongside the radio or alongside the

35:06 . So it's going to receive sensory from the posterior arm as well as

35:10 form and the lateral three digits. you ever fallen asleep on your

35:14 You're woken up and your fingers are fuzzy and you can like, I

35:17 feel these but I can't feel those you compress that radial nerve.

35:24 Also, posterior arm and forearm Median nerve. Well it goes right

35:30 the middle right. And so it the anterior forearm and as well as

35:34 lateral hand and receives sensory information from lateral palm region as well as the

35:39 tips of the lateral fingers. So , it'd be these three fingers right

35:44 and then the owner nerve is the 1.5 digits sensory input as well as

35:49 anterior medial forearm. So just think terms of where is my old nuts

35:54 this side? Where is my That's on this side? So,

35:56 dealing with this side of the the . All right. And then your

36:02 hand muscles. Those are the muscles your hand. Okay, So that

36:06 can do stuff like that. Probably better way to show you.

36:13 five nerves at the break of All right. So, we have

36:19 protect plexus is up high one for cervical region, one for your

36:25 That'd be breaking the last two are little bit easier. Again, there's

36:31 a degree of complexity to it that ignoring. But we have a sacred

36:35 and we have a lumbar plexus. they just combine the two and say

36:39 all the nerves of the lower Alright. The Sacral Plexus is formed

36:44 L. four s. 4. And there is some overlap, which

36:49 why I say that you kind of them combined and in terms of

36:52 you end up with an anterior and division. Alright? So basically as

36:57 go in, you can see that divides itself out now. The key

37:01 here. So sacred deals primarily with posterior aspects of the lower limbs.

37:07 basically our butts on the backs of legs and the bottom of your

37:11 It's an easy way to remember The lumbar plexus is going to be

37:14 opposite is going to deal with the portion? All right. So,

37:19 terms of the nerves I want you know basically these two primary nerves which

37:24 out of the sciatic nerve or the nerve is what you're kind of looking

37:29 . So here it is. These the two big ones, right?

37:34 , you can see here here's the divisions. And what they do is

37:36 going to form the tibial nerve and common fibula nerve. All right.

37:43 know, your sciatic nerve? All . That's the one that sits deep

37:47 your glorious. Have you ever seen elbow and kind of massage the deep

37:51 for you? No. Alright. you've done that stretch. The four

37:56 , you get on the ground, your leg cross it over your

37:58 pull your knee up towards your Ever done that? It's like it's

38:03 the best stretch ever. Alright. see one person nodding their head like

38:07 I find great pleasure in this Yes athlete looking at me going,

38:12 know this stretch, it is the stretch, it is like ah yes

38:16 is what makes me want to wake in the day, you know you're

38:20 , this is what it's gonna feel for the rest of your life.

38:24 . and then about 30 minutes after get up here about like this and

38:28 they need to start milligram, do stretches in the morning. Makes life

38:33 much better. Alright so with regard the tibial nerve, where's your

38:39 Do you remember? So this is femur and the next bone is the

38:50 and then the fibula. Alright so nerve so you can kind of see

38:55 we're doing. Sciatic nerve goes down so that it basically breaks into two

39:00 . The tibial nerves follows the posterior thigh and leg. Alright so

39:06 your thigh? So the posterior will back leg as well and then the

39:13 foot muscles. All right? So the anterior division. Post your

39:18 Common fibula. Now we're going to back of the knee and the anterior

39:23 lateral leg muscles right around here. but again where we were receiving

39:29 inferior regions of the foot, so the planter regions. So sacral deals

39:37 the back and the back of the , Bottom of the feet, in

39:41 butt. The last one the lumber . Alright. The lumbar plexus.

39:48 , it's going to be primary the nerves, alright. Not as complex

39:53 a break here, but it does anterior and posterior divisions. All

39:57 And the two primary nerves coming out this is ephemeral and the operator.

40:03 . Ephemeral is basically comes from the here, division, operator comes from

40:08 anterior division. This primarily deals with and extension of the knee and

40:14 This right here deals primarily with the thigh. So talking right there and

40:21 terms of sensory input sensory inputs, medial thigh and here the anterior inferior

40:27 thigh. So basically around the front . So you're basically covering in this

40:33 that's still going down further. But think these were the important important bits

40:38 all this. So do you think from this nasty mess, do you

40:44 the rest of this is kind of straightforward, Kind of think of your

40:50 and how it's organized, right? you have a front and back?

40:54 you know your front from your You better not your heads. Mom

41:00 she's gonna give you a pal pal going to be palpable on which

41:07 the posterior side. That's an easy to remember it all right. Let's

41:18 go back. We're starting at the cord, spinal cord, you form

41:24 ruthless, ruthless to the route, to the Nerve Nerve divides goes three

41:31 directions forming the rema. Good. have the dorsal ramus which goes to

41:38 skin and muscles of the back. communications which were ignoring because reasons.

41:44 then over here to the eventual ramos ramus forms intercostal nerves and the different

41:49 is which then formed the different We just looked at All right,

41:54 hmm. So, that's enough peripheral system for today. I think.

42:02 get into the brain. Are you old enough to have watched pinky in

42:07 brain? Do you remember the brain ? No. one person. You

42:14 the brain song? All right. your homework before all the other real

42:18 is go on Youtube. And look . The brain sings the brain

42:25 That's everything you have to know for class. What we're looking at.

42:31 a three room. All right. , we looked at the spinal

42:36 We looked at its organization and what doing is we're skipping all the stuff

42:39 the middle and we're coming up to top and then we're gonna work down

42:43 the spinal cord again, that's just organization of the book. Not the

42:47 organizational world, but it is what is. All right. So,

42:51 we think of the central nervous system the brain, this is what we

42:54 of. But all the other parts were not mentioning right now are part

42:56 the brain Alright, This is the , This is that portion of the

43:01 all right. And you can see has all these folds and all these

43:04 in there and these serve as landmarks anatomists. Now, the reason you

43:09 all these things is because the brain actually rather large structure that grows within

43:15 very, very confined space. And what it does, it folds itself

43:18 and over and over itself on itself a very specific way that gives rise

43:22 these structures. Now the elevated regions is the than the singular form which

43:28 much easier to say is gyros Gyrated plural just sounds weird coming off

43:32 tongue. Right? But that's a , alright? And then when you

43:37 down deep, in other words, the hill comes down and goes into

43:40 valley, that valley or depression is the sulcus. Now there's another type

43:45 valley which is called the fisher, typically deeper than what you'd see with

43:49 to sulcus. But what's interesting is some fisher's work called sulk cases and

43:57 those names for a long period of . So you might see an older

44:01 or have old professors who will use term sulcus sometimes when fishers should be

44:07 or are now currently used alright. fishers typically are very, very deep

44:12 other words when you spread out, the fisher, you'll probably go all

44:17 way through or at least like in wise, instead of just kind of

44:21 going, it's like really deep. this right here is an example of

44:27 fisher. Real, real obvious If you were to take and separate

44:32 fisher, you'd see that what you're is you're separating out the temporal lobe

44:36 the other structures of the cerebrum and some views that we'll see a little

44:41 later where you'll see that All there are four major regions of the

44:47 . So the cerebrum is what we looked at. So this would be

44:50 cerebrum right here. All the color Kennedy looking things. But we also

44:54 some other structures you can't see here underneath the temporal lobe and sitting on

44:59 of the brain stem is something called diane cephalon. All right.

45:03 if you think of the diet, as being a stem or sorry,

45:07 brain stem as being the stem or stalk of a say a mushroom.

45:11 first region that you're going to come is called the diane cephalon and then

45:15 you do is you set the cerebrum top of the diane cephalon. The

45:19 name for the giants are the other for the screen room is called the

45:22 cephalon, the brain stem, you see down here and then back in

45:28 back, That's the little brain called . That's literally what that word

45:33 All right. Now, if you at the cerebral, don't know why

45:37 point there things over there. All . You can see that there are

45:41 halves, right? So you can the two halves. It's divided by

45:45 longitudinal fissure, so that you end with the left and right cerebral

45:50 Alright, so here's your left cerebral . Here's the right. Now,

45:55 can look at that and say they're the same. They are not exactly

45:58 same. They're actually rather different. share lots of commonalities. In

46:04 there are many regions that are duplicated the two sides, but there are

46:07 regions that are not, which is of interesting. Anyone here paying attention

46:13 the news, like generally speaking, you heard the news about Bruce

46:17 What happened to Bruce Willis? Alright, Aphasia, if you don't

46:23 , he's not going to act He retired himself from acting really.

46:26 family, retired him from acting and has aphasia aphasia is an inability to

46:31 or really to produce language in other . I don't know what the words

46:37 and um have difficulty forming sentences as result. All right. You can

46:43 the words just fine. They just no real meaning. All right.

46:47 language centers of the brain are located primarily in most of us on the

46:52 side of the brain. All Not on the right side. And

46:56 typically what's happening is there's lesions that there that affect your ability to understand

47:01 or produce language. Not speech. mouth works just fine. All

47:08 So left and right hemispheres. So have that and within each hemisphere.

47:14 on. Stupid thing. Well, guess it helps. I'm not pressing

47:23 . We gotta make sure don't push laser button. Press the forward

47:27 Each hemisphere has five lobes. if you look at the picture you

47:32 count them up and you see how , how many colors? four.

47:37 there are five lobes. Dammit. Wayne. Why do you keep screwing

47:41 us? Well, we have the lobe. We have the pride of

47:44 . We have the occipital lobe. have the tender pearl lobe. Notice

47:46 names. You already know those lobes the bones under which they are

47:51 Alright, so frontal parietal occipital real simple. The fifth lobe sits

47:59 and inside. So it's basically underneath frontal lobe and between the two temporal

48:05 . So you can't say it's called insula. All right. Now,

48:09 I was in your seats and I learning my anatomy, there were four

48:13 . This is what it just goes show you. It takes a couple

48:15 years before things get in the So there's five lobes. By the

48:20 you're sitting up here. If you're of me, if you are so

48:24 , there might be six lobes. never know. Someone's going to name

48:27 and say he's gonna find someone in textbook. All right. So you

48:31 see the insulin that picture in this . You can. And this is

48:35 I was saying here, we separate the fisher. So that would be

48:38 insula right back in there. All , So with regard to the frontal

48:45 . Alright, that's the easy You can see. It's sitting right

48:47 . The candy kind of helps you and remember what I said. The

48:51 and viruses help identify structure. And we can use them to help us

48:56 where the interior or where the frontal is, where the parietal lobe

49:00 And so what we have is we on this side right here, you

49:04 kind of see the dotted line that called the central sulcus, the central

49:09 on either side or Gira. Gira . The one in the front is

49:15 the pre central gyrus. The one it is called the post central

49:20 Right? So you can use essential as the border between the frontal lobe

49:26 the parietal lobe. Alright, the central gyrus is going to be very

49:31 in understanding muscle movement a little bit , but with regard to the frontal

49:35 , what is involved in, a lot of movement. So voluntary

49:40 activity plays a role in speech which a type of motor movement,

49:46 What what what am I doing is moving my lips and my tongue to

49:50 things that sound like words right? plays a role in thought decision making

49:56 planning. All right. So that's frontal lobe. You ever heard of

50:02 frontal lobotomy? Alright. You've heard term If you watch one flew over

50:09 cuckoo's nest. Have you seen? seen that movie? Are you guys

50:12 young? two people, 3 people seen it. Just getting older and

50:19 . All right back in the day people were put into asylums, one

50:23 the ways you curbed abnormal behavior was gave a frontal lobotomy? All

50:29 frontal lobotomy deals with that area. frontal lobe and specifically the frontal regions

50:34 the frontal lobe is the region where have thought and planning. So people

50:38 had poor thought and planning in other , usually violent outbursts of of activity

50:44 were dangerous. They considered dangerous What you do is you drill a

50:47 tiny hole in the front. You a little tiny wire and then you

50:50 it around really really fast. It the frontal lobe into scrambled eggs and

50:55 have no more problems. Yeah that's look that we give now. But

51:00 made sense back back then. But it kind of helps you thought

51:06 making planning parietal lobe. Alright. where's the pride lobe? That's where

51:13 wear your hat your Yamaka whatever up on the top of your head.

51:17 right in the central sulcus demarcated between temper or excuse me? With the

51:23 and parietal on the backside is the excuse me is the, well we

51:30 the lateral sulcus here but it's I'm trying to say parietal occipital so

51:35 that little dotted line that there's parietal and so it serves the parietal from

51:40 occipital lobe and then the lateral sulcus is now the lateral fissure is what

51:45 as the demarcation between the parietal lobe the temporal lobe. So that's where

51:50 sets up. The parietal lobe plays a role in receiving uh sensory

51:58 And when we say sensory input we that kind of global but you can

52:02 in terms of touch, you know things that touch you or things that

52:07 touching that's not what it's limited to that's its primary area. All right

52:14 we move on to the occipital Again we have the parietal occipital sulcus

52:19 lobe primarily involved in visual processing and memory. Alright. How do I

52:26 that? Well if my eyes were or lenses then everything that would go

52:33 my brain would end up in the of my head. That's not how

52:36 works but that's the way I remember . It's occipital division over here?

52:42 the temporal lobe. Again that lateral or lateral sulcus serves as a dividing

52:47 here that pride, occipital sulcus serves a dividing line between it and the

52:52 . And so temporal lobe plays a role in auditory. So where is

52:58 near? It's near the ear. plays a little bit of a role

53:02 olfaction and then it plays a little of a role in visual processing time

53:09 . Do not write this down. you look at the whole cerebrum basically

53:14 at the occipital lobe and working your up this direction and working your way

53:18 that direction. Most of the brain a role in visual processing. I've

53:23 said that, but I don't want to write that down. All

53:25 when you think visual, I want to think first, occipital. All

53:30 . Secondarily, maybe temporal. Finally have the insula. The insula is

53:37 deep within, so it's directly underneath frontal lobe and and and and kind

53:42 hidden by the temporal lobe. It a role in memory and plays a

53:48 in gustatory sensory input. Gustatory is okay with regard to the white

54:05 Remember we said white matter plays a in in um sending information between two

54:11 . So, if you look at but you can see where the gray

54:14 is. We've we've looked at this primarily. So here's gray matter,

54:18 great gray matter located entirely and then else is white matter. White matter

54:23 those tracks between two points and so can move between lobes or you can

54:29 between regions or you can move between structures right? Within the central nervous

54:36 . So we have names for each these. A commis surreal tract.

54:40 here's a commercial track is going between . So basically moving from one side

54:46 the other, you're not moving from side over here to another on the

54:50 side, way over there. They're , it's going to be matching

54:53 So you're basically moving left to right right to left. Association tracks.

54:58 the other hand, is what connects parts of the same hemisphere. And

55:03 two little ones. We have short that are called the RQ. It

55:06 really hard to see in this picture they're yellow is a really, really

55:10 chiller color choice but it's basically taken between this virus and that virus like

55:16 . So that would be a short eight fiber. The long ones are

55:21 longitudinal physically. And so the red are trying to demonstrate what that would

55:26 of look like. So oh, moving from way over here all the

55:28 to my frontal lobe. In other , maybe I have something auditory that

55:33 recognize. And so I'm trying to it with my planning like maybe a

55:38 of a horn or something like And then finally moving from the cerebrum

55:43 into different areas. These would be tracks which are represented by the great

55:48 green lines in Harlow cartoon. So can travel different places. Right?

55:55 can send process information in one Send those results to another area and

56:00 with processing or further processing or decision easy enough. Right? If you're

56:06 in the street and cars are honking you, are you getting a whole

56:09 of sensory input? What do you ? Yeah. So can you make

56:15 based on that? It might not good decisions, but can you make

56:20 based on. Yeah. And so is coming from all these different places

56:24 all these different areas to ultimately help make some sort of action jumping past

56:36 diane cephalon. Moving down to the stem and just following the textbook.

56:42 think the reason I did this is that we can look at these different

56:44 parts. All right. So the stem is consists of three different

56:49 We have the medulla oblon gata. , that's down low. That's the

56:53 . So, we have the medulla gata. We have the ponds and

56:56 we have the midbrain. You can the medulla oblon gata. The medulla

57:00 makes our lives easier. Right? , we just refer to it as

57:03 medal or medulla. All right. the medulla is closest to the spinal

57:09 . So all the fibers that are from the spinal cord are traveling into

57:12 medulla. And so they play a role or critical role in some of

57:17 autonomic reflexes that you have. All , you're going to see that there's

57:23 relayed from the diane cephalon, the to help control several of your visceral

57:29 . Let's think of visceral functions. is something that is something that your

57:34 does that you can't think about or you don't think about. I heard

57:40 breathing. That's a visceral function. about heart rate? Right now?

57:45 heart rates are approaching like 60 thump. Come on. Why?

57:56 told her I was boring. I yell, scare the crap out of

58:02 . Watch your heart rate go Right? So we have the medulla

58:07 we are. Oh, I'm like are the fourth ventricle, fourth ventricles

58:13 there. Alright, so there's a . Alright, in terms of the

58:17 , ponds sits in between. You see it has kind of a lumpy

58:20 . Alright, basically this serves as relay conduit between the cerebellum and the

58:27 . That's not the only thing that , but that's an easy way to

58:29 of think about it fibers that need travel between the stream and the cerebellum

58:32 from the cerebellum downward are going to to pass through the ponds to get

58:38 . Finally the midbrain the separate This plays a controlling eye and head

58:45 . You guys ever watch the brady . Are you guys too too young

58:48 that? You know what the brady was and then look back at the

58:51 who raised their hands for. So was an episode of the brady

58:57 Do you know who the characters in bunch are? You know? See

59:00 right. Greg was the oldest. . And he had just gotten his

59:06 . Remember when you first got your license? Did you bump into

59:10 Yeah, he's backed out of a spot at the grocery store and hit

59:18 and that person took them to small court. This was the crux of

59:22 episode. Greg gets his driver's license somebody. The guy shows up at

59:27 small claims court with a neck brace what had happened, whiplash,

59:34 You know what lashes? All You're gonna do something like that.

59:39 your neck. All right? the guy went in there and how

59:43 you prove that he's faking it? mean, not a lot you can

59:50 . And things were dire for I mean, it looked like he

59:53 gonna have to pay for the damage to the other car, but it

59:56 was the other guy that hit him Greg just got his license and because

60:00 you get your license, what do do right? You follow all the

60:04 of the road, don't you? check all three mirrors when you back

60:09 . Yeah, of course you right? Do you back out

60:13 Yes, because you're driving mom's car dad's going to kill you if you

60:16 something. Right? So Greg was . I mean it was like he

60:20 going to have to pay like 100 to get the other guys card because

60:24 this is the early seventies, 100 , you know? Anyway. So

60:29 does, I can't remember his name . The dad do. It's like

60:34 looking dire. So he's in the of the courtroom, guys wearing the

60:37 facing the judge and he drops his . What does the guy do?

60:44 happens when you hear any sound behind ? Turn your head if you have

60:49 , you can't do that. It's painful. You do this. What

60:57 of the brain is responsible for regulating . Midbrain. There you go.

61:02 that's why I told you the Now there are several seasons of brady

61:05 . You can go home and watch probably on Youtube. Who knows parts

61:11 these things man, this is where gets scary again. Not that bad

61:17 . All right. So, we're look at some stuff and you're gonna

61:21 at the picture and I don't see . That's okay. We all we're

61:24 keep coming back to some of these and over again. Alright, I'm

61:28 going to throw a picture up on test and say identify this. That

61:33 not the plan here. Right? How are you going to learn that

61:37 ? Just one picture. Alright. what I'm more interested in is understanding

61:41 the parts do. Okay. And they might be found. So I

61:46 ask you the question. Where is olive found? Alright. The olive

61:50 found here in the middle of long . Right. Is not found in

61:56 other parts. Okay. So what we have? We have the

61:59 What do you think they're called They look like a pyramid there triangular

62:04 . Right? Why do you think call an olive? Because it tastes

62:08 you know because it looks like an . Alright. Yes. Real.

62:14 basic easy stuff here. Okay, the pyramids are actually rather long.

62:20 right. So you can see here the pyramids and they can't contain within

62:23 a series of tracks that are traveling to the spinal cord. And what

62:29 gonna see here is very often you're see these fibers cross at the

62:34 It's called the devastation. When you cross or hear declaration. Think it's

62:39 cross. So you've probably heard at point in your life that's the left

62:43 of your brain controls the right side your body and vice versa. Have

62:46 heard that at some point? And it's true, that's what happens

62:50 most of them for most of the in your body. That's because of

62:54 crossing this declaration. That takes place at the pyramids. All right.

63:00 that's the pyramids over here. These the olives. Alright. There's an

63:04 there. You can see there's an there. Alright. Here, what

63:08 doing is primarily sending sensory input into cerebellum. Alright. And what we're

63:14 kind of doing is we're telling the we're gonna learn what the cerebellum plays

63:18 role in. But here's a bunch information you need to co process so

63:21 you could help me plan a movement um what I'm doing. Alright.

63:28 that's what the olives are. The that we're looking at here is called

63:32 inferior olive. Very nucleus. There is. You can see so,

63:35 that term nucleus. What does the mean when we're talking about the central

63:39 system where a bunch of great, basically gray matter. It's where a

63:43 of processing is taking place. So, in the olive, you'll

63:47 the inferior Oliveria nuclei if you have inferior one, what do you

63:52 Do you think there's gonna be a one? Yeah. Okay. Um

63:58 word pad, Uncle say podunk because just fun. Good uncle. All

64:03 . What's the bad uncle? It's a knuckle, But it can be

64:07 a knuckle, basically it's a bump it's a raised area in the brain

64:14 tracks between two points. So here have inferior cerebellum paid uncles.

64:20 There's one on each side, inferior it's the lowest. That means there

64:24 be a superior. And there's also going to see there's gonna be a

64:28 one as well. Sara Beller, tells you where the tracks are

64:33 right? So basically, it's the from the cerebellum, sending tracks downward

64:41 the medulla. You'll also see them the ponds. All right. There's

64:46 series of autonomic nuclear. And that term autonomic refers to the autonomic

64:51 system. So, information is being without your control at these autonomic

64:58 So, remember what we said is those visceral processes. Vaso motor.

65:04 . That's blood pressure. Vezo refers blood vessels. The respiratory center.

65:10 a medullary one belonging to the And then there's a Pontiac in one

65:15 belongs to the pond. Now, they're looking at is they're trying to

65:19 the cartoon they're pointing to these regions here. Again, I'm not going

65:22 ask you to identify them. There's gonna be two different um Also

65:27 for all these fun little things. you control your sneezing? Mm mm

65:35 mm mm mm mm. That's fake , right? Salivating. If I

65:42 to talk about freshly baked brownies chocolate . I mean, only the few

65:48 individuals of you who don't like chocolate going to sit there and whatever,

65:53 ? But most of us if we of that brownie. All right.

65:57 just came out of the oven. know when it comes right out of

65:59 oven and you're sitting there with the . It's like no, I've got

66:01 let it rest. And you're no, no, no, don't

66:04 it. And you put it on plate and it's almost like melt off

66:08 I'm talking that brownie, right? you get that ice cream, You

66:15 the ice cream, you put it top just close over it and you're

66:20 skirt. I'm not even getting a . I'm going straight to the

66:23 taking that. Cool that warm putting your mouth. Can you can you

66:27 it? Yeah, I can make celebrate. All right, but you

66:35 control it. Alright. We have other areas that I'm pointing them out

66:40 because they're going to be important The nucleus cuny artist and the nucleus

66:44 sillas. They're not showing it up , but you can see this structure

66:49 here. The medial meniscus, That's pathway between these structures and other structures

66:57 down. And when we talk about pathways, you'll actually be able to

67:00 where the nucleus cutie artists and nucleus are. They're basically right up

67:06 Okay, they're kind of in this . All right. And it's how

67:10 is being sent to and from the regions of the body to the up

67:14 the higher central nervous system. And you have a whole bunch of cranial

67:18 nuclei. And so you're the lowest is the lowest part of the brain

67:21 . So you're looking at the cranial , number eight. Through cranial

67:26 number 12. All right. Now haven't talked about the cranial nerves

67:30 have we ever? All right. just a little sidebar because we're gonna

67:34 them a little bit later. You spinal nerves where the spinal nerves originate

67:37 of spinal cord. Where do you the cranial nerves originate out of

67:44 Yeah, the cranium. So basically the structures that are going to innovate

67:48 the head and the neck with the of one. And then the spinal

67:52 are basically your body. And so you see that don't freak out.

67:56 people freak out. They see cranial . There's 12 of them.

67:59 I got to know all the parts . They're really easy there named for

68:02 they do. Okay, but a of people make you panic about

68:06 So today we're not gonna panic about . Just know this is where we

68:09 the last 12. Get to the . Remember the pond sits above a

68:15 of areas. Remember we said we paid uncles, these are cerebellum.

68:18 in this particular section. So it's a specific slice that we're looking

68:23 We could have sliced lower. We sliced haider higher but we didn't.

68:26 so we have the podunk als this is just these bumped areas giving

68:31 to fibers that are traveling between the and the ponds. We have the

68:37 respiratory center located within the ponds. it with, along with the medullary

68:42 or medullary respiratory center plays a role regulating how you breathe regularly. We

68:47 the super olive. Very complex here dealing with sound location. What do

68:51 do with the other one? Do remember? Where was it? The

68:55 ? Oh it doesn't say so this going to be a sound and then

68:58 going to see one that's for And so when I hear something I

69:02 my head, every guy's ever watched tennis match. Right. What do

69:06 do? Right. It's just like puppy watching the ball. Right?

69:13 would be a different region. But the same idea. The idea of

69:18 responsiveness working with the eyes. So olive, very complex, deals with

69:24 and then a bunch of cranial This cranial number number five and through

69:28 nerve number eight which also deals with megillah from medulla oblon, gata,

69:35 . The last one here is the midbrain. We have cerebral pad.

69:43 . The other ones were sarah cerebral cerebral sarah bellum, Sarah

69:52 Alright so these are areas going into cerebrum. All right containing tracks that

70:01 traveling downward. Really not going up it. We have this dark

70:06 Okay so here's a cerebral paid uncle can see it's big. You have

70:11 dark region. It's called the substantia . Alright which is called the black

70:17 right now. What this region is basically a lot of melanin in

70:20 that's why it's dark. Alright. what it does, it produces a

70:25 bunch of dopamine, that dopamine is throughout the brain to do all sorts

70:29 fun stuff. Right? Pleasure pain, emotional responses plays a role

70:34 movement. It's all over the Dopamine is one of those neurotransmitters.

70:38 just kind of a ubiquitous neurotransmitter. right. It's also connected to the

70:45 basil nuclear, which we haven't talked yet. Alright. What it does

70:49 , it helps to coordinate movement when get to the basil nuclear. That's

70:53 we're gonna be dealing with as much . So, uncle a substantial Niagara

71:02 region in here, it's called the Mentum. Then the last region is

71:06 to be called the tech TEM. Tag Mentum has the red nuclei.

71:10 don't know why they call it that then they have right here, this

71:15 that's kind of all around is referred as a particular formation which plays a

71:20 in alertness. All right, red plays a role in motor coordination.

71:26 , if you're paying close attention, starting to see that. Well,

71:30 something that plays a role in motor . Here is something that plays a

71:33 in movement. Oh, here's another . Motor skills, here's movement.

71:37 , whenever we're dealing with movement, very easy to say this one area

71:41 involved in movement. But we don't see the big picture. Movement has

71:45 whole bunch of things that plays a in coordinating movement, send things as

71:51 as taking that one step forward requires lot of coordination. So you can

71:57 of the tag momentum playing a role your posture, sitting upright, holding

72:01 shoulders back so on and so It plays a role in integrating information

72:05 the cerebellum and cerebrum, which plays important role in motor uh or motor

72:12 or motor movements. The period all gray matter is part of is

72:20 here. You can see it's around is the cerebral aqueduct plays an important

72:24 in modulating pain. And then finally have the tech team which is everything

72:28 . So this is where we have portion called the superior curricula. This

72:33 showing superior down here, it's showing inferior curricula. So superior calculus is

72:40 reflexes, inferior calculus, auditory Again. Turning my head in response

72:46 things I hear turning my head in to things I see in terms of

72:51 cranial nuclei that are located within the creating number number three cranial nerve.

72:55 four are found in these regions. I think I have one more slide

73:00 then we're done and I just want throw this thing up here one because

73:03 important to what the particular formation But to the particular formation and every

73:08 is like the worst picture ever. . And it usually shows you a

73:12 like this, you can see the stem, It shows you kind of

73:15 , this region like this? So kind of this red region in

73:21 That's a particular formation. This is slice through the medulla. Alright,

73:26 would be down here and you can here is a particular formation highlighted in

73:31 . All right. And it goes the way up through the entire brain

73:35 . Now, what we have here this structural particular formation is something called

73:39 particular activating system. It plays an role in maintaining cortical alertness. All

73:47 , well what's cortical alertness? the best way to describe it,

73:56 what helps keep you alert. Have been driving in a car? You

74:01 like you don't have like a really car, Like I don't know a

74:04 car. Do you have a smart ? But but you have a small

74:08 . Have you been stuck between two going 70 mph? Are you,

74:11 you find yourself a little alert during periods of time? Yeah.

74:15 You're like white knuckling it please. of you just recognize that I'm

74:18 You can actually feel the gravitation of vehicles beside you. All right.

74:23 your particular activating system going. Um attention everything and it's sending you,

74:27 sending you every input that I possibly in order to keep you alive.

74:31 , so that's a rare one. an easy one. You're falling asleep

74:34 class. Even this one, yeah. Have you ever done this

74:41 asleep and then come on, the activating system? Alright. That that

74:51 jerk is basically uh your sleep center fighting with the, the ras and

74:58 essence what your brain is doing is , hey, pay attention, you're

75:02 to bang your head against the right? Or the worst is I

75:07 this once. So I've been teaching long time in a small class in

75:10 school is someone fell asleep and I everyone to be very, very quiet

75:14 I dismissed people one by one, up and walk out and we left

75:18 all alone in the classroom. It awesome. So what you're talking about

75:28 , when, when you're sleeping and find yourself going in and out of

75:31 sleep, right? It's like you like you're, you're feel like you're

75:35 but then you're kind of stuck in reality and you're kind of going back

75:37 forth. That has to do with uh sleep system, not the numbers

75:43 a, on a bed. It to do with the different levels and

75:47 of sleep that you're in. So actually falling into that dream state that

75:51 sleep and you're not fighting, You're you're working your way down towards deep

75:55 , but you're basically trying to fight a little bit. So the activating

75:59 is the part that's trying to fight it, trying to keep you

76:02 . Whereas there's the sleep system which basically saying no, no,

76:05 go to sleep now. I just to point out there's also other functions

76:09 here. You can see it has respiratory and cardiac function. You

76:14 you can see patterns of sleep, movement, some motor functions. So

76:19 not just simply, you know, alertness, but it but it does

76:24 a role in in kind of keeping system up and active along multiple ways

76:31 order to do the things that you . I mean that's kind of just

76:34 but you can see there's lots of listed in there this weekend.

76:42 if you have another class after but those of us who don't have

76:44 classes, it's the weekend.

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