Regions of the Brain
The Spinal Cord
Brain Injuries and Disorders
Lobes of the Brain
Cranial Nerves
100

Regulates heart rate and breathing

Brain Stem

100

a medical procedure where a thin needle is inserted into the lower back

Spinal Tap

100

Slight brain injury, no permanent damage 

Concussion

100

Contains primary motor cortex, controls most body movement, planning and decision making


Frontal Lobe

100

A motor nerve that controls the muscles in the face and scalp

Facial

200

Connects the cerebrum with the rest of the nervous system

Diencephalon

200

Vaccines developed by Salk and Sabin have nearly eliminated this spinal disease


Poliomyelitis (Polio)

200

Progressive degenerative brain disease commonly seen in the elderly

Alzheimer’s Disease

200

Input from Optic nerve

Occipital Lobe

200

Conveys impulses for light

Opric

300

Has an outer cortex of gray matter, controls coordination and balance

Cerebral Hemisphere

300

Fills the central canal of the spinal cord

Cerebrospinal Fluid

300

Swelling from an inflammatory response

Cerebral edema

300

Inputs are auditory and visual patterns, controls speech, face, and word recognition

Temporal Lobe

300

Responsible for sense of smell

Olfactory

400

Outer cortex of gray matter, controls motor learning

Cerebellum

400

Progressive destruction of anterior horn     motor neurons due to abnormal genes.


Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS)


400

Nervous tissue destruction occur, does not regenerate

Contusion

400

Hand-eye coordination, eye movements, attention


Parietal Lobe

400

Controls the oblique muscles of the eye

Trochlear

500

Key parts of the diencephalon, located deep in the brain

The thalamus, hypothalamus, and epithalamus

500

Spinal cord injury can result in sensory loss, also called:

Paresthesias

500

Commonly called a stroke, result of ruptured blood vessel supplying brain

Cerebrovascular Accident

500

Physical development of the brain is complete at age?

10

500

Innervates the muscle of the tongue

Hypoglossal