The Thalamus Is A Scanner: All Information Comes Into The Thalamus Before Being Distributed To Other Parts of The Brain
The Thalamus Is A Scanner: All Information Comes Into The Thalamus Before Being Distributed To Other Parts of The Brain
The Thalamus Is A Scanner: All Information Comes Into The Thalamus Before Being Distributed To Other Parts of The Brain
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Introduction- The Thalamus
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Dorsal view ventral view
The Thalamus
(from Greek = bedroom, chamber)
•3.5cm in length,
1.5cm in width
•80 % of the diencephalon
•paired and symmetric part
of the brain
•There are 2 thalami,
one on each side of the 3rd
ventricle, they are connected
by the interthalamic adhesion
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Introduction- The Thalamus
Insula
Internal
capsule
Lentiform
nucleus
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Coronal Section
Coronal view
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Dorsal View
Boundaries of the Thalamus
Anterior:
interventricular foramen
Posterior:
free pole of the pulvinar
Dorsal:
free surface underlying
the fornix and the lateral
ventricle
Ventral:
plane connecting the
hypothalamic sulci
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Boundaries of the Thalamus
Medial:
third ventricle
Lateral:
posterior limb of the
internal capsule
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Thalamus
Relations
Dorsal: lateral ventricle Anterior:
interventricular
foramen
POST. ANT.
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VENTRAL
Internal medullary lamina
Interthalamic adhesion
Ant. Nucleus
Medial nucleus
Anterior Posterior
MGB
LGB
.
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Common
Subdivision Principal Nuclei
abbreviation
Ant. nuclear group
Med. nuclear group
Lat. nuclear group
Lateral dorsal LD
Dorsal tier Lateral posterior LP
Pulvinar P
Ventral anterior VA
Ventral intermediate VI
Ventral posterior VP
Ventral tier
Ventral posterolateral VPL
Ventral posteromedial VPM
Ventral posterioinferior VPI
Functional subdivision
• VL circuits:
a. Cerebral-cerbellar-cerebral
b. Cerebral-basal ganglia-
cerebral
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Main Thalamic Nuclei and Their Major
Connections
Medial part
•Contains the large Mediodorsal
nucleus and several smaller nuclei
•The Mediodorsal nucleus is
reciprocally connected to the
Prefrontal cortex of the frontal lobe.
•It has abundant connections with all
other groups of thalamic nuclei
•It receives input from
• amygdaloid nucleus,
• temporal neocortex, and
• substantia
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nigra.
Main Thalamic Nuclei and Their Major
Connections
Medial part
Function:
•integration of a large variety
of sensory information,
including somatic, visceral,
and olfactory information
•relate this information to
one’s emotional feeling
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Main Thalamic Nuclei and Their Major
Connections
Mediodorsal nucleus (dorsomedial nucleus)
Clinical correlate
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Main Thalamic Nuclei and Their Major
Connections
Lateral part – Ventral tier
• Receives
vestibulothalamic
fibres from the
vestibular nuclei.
• Projects to the
vestibular area of the
somatosensory
cortex.
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Main Thalamic Nuclei and Their Major
Connections
Intralaminar nuclei
•A groups of nuclei embedded within
the internal medullary lamina
•input from the brainstem reticular
formation, and other thalamic nuclei,
spinothalamic and trigeminothalamic
tracts
•efferent fibres to other thalamic
nuclei which, in turn, project diffusely
to the entire neocortex.
•The nuclei are believed to influence
the levels of consciousness and
alertness
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in an individual – the level
of activity of cerebral cortex
AA
VA MD
VL
VPL
P
VPM
LGB MGB
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Blood Supply of the Thalamus
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Blood Supply of the Thalamus
2.Posterior cerebral artery
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Thalamogeniculate artery
Thalamoperforating artery
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Function of the Thalamus
•Following removal of the cortex the thalamus can
appreciate crude sensation.
•However, the cerebral cortex is required for the
interpretation of sensation based on past experience.
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Functional Roles
Thalamus has four basic functional roles:
Sensory
All sensory information (except olfaction) is relayed to the cortex via the
thalamus
Motor
Motor system outputs from the basal ganglia and cerebellum are
relayed by the thalamus
Emotion/memory
The thalamus is part of the Papez circuit and helps control some
emotional and memory information going to limbic cortex
(cingulate gyrus)
Vegetative
The thalamus has some intrinsic nuclei associated with alertness
and arousal. Can be associated with disorders of consciousness
Functional Roles
Modality: Vision
Receptor: Photoreceptor Cell of Retina
Cranial Nerve: II (Optic nerve)
1. Pigment Epithelium
- retinal detachment
2. Neuronal Layer
(1) Photosensitive Cell Layer
Rod Cell, Cone Cell
(2) Bipolar Cell Layer
Bipolar Cell
Horizontal Cell
Amacrine Cell
(3) Ganglion Cell Layer
Ganglion Cell
Optic Nerve (II)
Visual
Pathway
1. Optic nerve
2. Optic chiasm
3. Optic tract
4. Lateral
geniculate
body
5. Optic radiation
6. Visual cortex
Visual (Optic) Pathway
Lateral Geniculate Nucleus (LGd) Visual Pathway
Meyer’s loop
Clinical Features of Visual Pathway Lesion
1. optic nerve
2. optic chiasm
3. optic tract
4. 5. optic radiation
A. unilateral blindness
B. bitemporal hemianopsia
C. left homonymous
hemianopsia
D. left inferior homony-
mous quadranopsia
E. left superior homony-
mous quadranopsia
Signs of Visual Pathway Lesion
Optic nerve
- ipsilateral blindness
Optic chiasm
- bitemporal hemianopsia
Optic tract
- contralateral homonymous hemianopsia
Optic radiation
- contralateral homonymous quadranopsia
- intact light reflex
Visual Cortex
- contralateral homonymous quadranopsia
- macular sparing
Visual Field Defect
Habenular Nucleus
Medial Habenular Nucleus
Habenular Commissure
Pineal Gland
Subthalamus Basal Ganglia
Subthalamic nucleus
zona incerta
Field of Forel
ansa lenticularis H
thalamic fasciculus H1
lenticular fasciculus H2