Cortical Structures
Subcortical Structures
Brain's Circulatory System
Cranial nerves
Clinical Situation
100

The function of frontal lobe

Decision making, problem solving, planning

100

What are the subcortical structures?

- basal ganglia

- Diencephalon (Thalamus, subthalamus, hypothalamus)

- amygdala

- Cerebellum

- brainstem

100

Where does the arterial blood supply originate from?

The heart

100

what is the cranial nerve that does not arise from the brainstem and where does it arise from?

CN 1 olfactory
- arises from under the frontal lobe

100

An imaging of the brain that allows scientists to establish the origin, course, and termination of the three major fiber tracts in the brain for speech and language:

Diffusion Tensor Imaging (DTI)

200

The function of temporal lobe

memory, language, emotion, hearing

200

Parts of the Brainstem in order from superior to inferior

- midbrain (most superior)
- pons (medial)
- medulla oblongata (most inferior)

200

What arteries does the anterior arterial supply come from?

Internal artery

200

what cranial nerves does the medulla contain?

IX glossopharyngeal (swallowing)

- X vagus (larynx)

- XI accessory (sternocleidomastoid),

- XII hypoglossal (tongue)

200

Primary motor cortex damage causes

Apraxia

300

The function of the parietal lobe

Receives, integrates, and processes sensory information and is in charge of phonological processing

300

What does the diencephalon consist of?

Thalamus, hypothalamus, subthalamus, epithalamus

300

What arteries does the posterior arterial supply come from?

Basilar artery

300

The function of cranial nerve X

plays an important role in speaking and swallowing, given its control of muscles that adjust the dimensions of the velopharyngeal port and the pharyngeal lumen, control tongue motion, and alter the tension and configuration of the vocal folds

300

What blockage in arterial supply may result in aphasia?

Blockage at the turn from the internal carotid artery to the Middle Cerebral Artery (MCA) deprives the anterior and posterior parts of the left hemisphere of blood and affects both expressive and receptive speech and language functions and lead to global aphasia

400

The function of the occipital lobe

Vision

400

Thalamus function

Mediates sensation to the cerebral cortex and  relays sensory info to the cerebral cortex

400

What does the Circle of Willis do?

Supplies blood to the brain and provides redundancy of blood supply in case of occlusion

400

The function of cranial nerve IX

plays a role in swallowing by shortening the pharyngeal tube

400

Broca aphasia is

non-fluent aphasia in which there is an ability to understand language, but an inability to produce intelligible words. 

500

What is a critical part of the cortical tissue that is engaged in speech, language, and swallowing functions?

The insular lobe

500

Function of the Homunculus

provides motor or sensory distribution along the cerebral cortex

500

What blood supply includes the cortical regions associated with speech, language, and hearing skills.

Middle cerebral artery (MCA)

500

Cranial nerve that turns the head and lifts the chin toward the side opposite the contraction 

Cranial nerve XI (Spinal Accessory Nerve)

500

Wernicke aphasia is characterized by

Impaired language comprehension