Saladin 13 Anatomy and Physiology Outline
Saladin 13 Anatomy and Physiology Outline
Saladin 13 Anatomy and Physiology Outline
Chapter 13
The Spinal Cord, Spinal Nerves, and Somatic Reflexes
I. The Spinal Cord (pp. 475483)
A. The spinal cord serves four principle functions. (p. 475)
1. Conduction. The spinal cord contains bundles of nerve fibers that conduct information
up and down the cord.
2. Neural integration. Pools of spinal neurons receive input from multiple sources,
integrate the information, and execute appropriate output.
3. Locomotion. Motor neurons in the brain initiate walking, but continued walking is
coordinated by groups of neurons called central patterns generators in the cord.
4. Reflexes. Spinal reflexes play vital roles in posture, motor coordination, and protective
responses to pain or injury.
B. In terms of surface anatomy, the spinal cord is a cylinder of nervous tissue that arises from the
brainstem at the foramen magnum, and then passes through the vertebral canal as far as the
inferior margin of the first lumbar vertebra or slightly beyond. (pp. 475476) (Fig. 13.1)
1. Early in fetal development, the spinal cord extends the full length of the vertebral
column. The vertebral column grows faster than the spinal cord, so by birth the spinal
cord extends only to L3.
2. The cord gives rise to 31 pairs of spinal nerves.
a. Although the cord is not visibly segmented, the part supplied by each pair of
spinal nerves is called a segment.
b. The cord exhibits longitudinal groovesthe anterior median fissure
anteriorly, and the posterior median sulcus posteriorly. (Fig. 13.2b)
3. The spinal cord is divided into cervical, thoracic, lumbar, and sacral regions, which are
named for the level of the vertebral column from which the spinal nerves emerge, not the
vertebrae that contain the cord.
4. In the inferior cervical region, the cervical enlargement of the cord gives rise to nerves
of the upper limbs.
5. In the lumbosacral region, the lumbar enlargement gives rise to nerves to the pelvic
region and lower limbs.
6. Inferior to the lumbar enlargement, the cord tapers to a point called the medullary cone
(conus medullaris).
7. The lumbar enlargement and medullary cone give rise to a bundle of nerve roots called
the cauda equina that occupy the vertebral canal from L2 to S5.
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Cross References
Additional information on topics mentioned in Chapter 13 can be found in the chapters listed below.
Chapter 10: Muscles each nerve supplies (tables)
Chapter 14: Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)
Chapter 14: Brainstem
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