What are the somatosensory pathways responsible for?
What are the somatosensory pathways for the body?
Which of the following corresponds to the primary somatosensory cortex? Where is it located?

Red (where all the somatosensory pathways end) –> post central gyrus
What information is received in the primary somatosensory cortex?
Pain, temperature and touch sensation
Which area is responsible for perceiving visual information?

Blue (occipital lobe)
Which area is responsible for perceiving auditory information?

Green - The auditory cortex is the part of the temporal lobe
What is another word for somatosensory?
Somaesthetic
The general sensory (somaesthetic) pathways carry information to the brain from where? What are examples of these modalities?
Modalities: vibration, touch, pressure, pain, temperature, proprioception

What is proprioception?
Our awareness of where our body parts are in space
What is each modality detected by (in the general somaesthetic pathways)?
Each modality is detected by specific sensory receptors / specialised nerve endings
e.g. specific receptor for vibration
These receptors then send their axons all the way via the spinal peripheral nerves to enter the spinal cord.

How does sensory info enter the spinal cord?
Dorsally
Sensory pathways travel from peripheral nerves into the CNS and ascend through spinal cord/brainstem to the brain.
Which nerves transmit sensory info from:
In the body: info transmitted by spinal nerves
In head, face and neck: info transmitted by cranial nerves.

What is a dermatome?
A specific region of skin of the body innervated by the sensory fibres of a single segmental spinal nerve (spinal cord segment):

Similar to dermatomes, areas of skin of the face supplied by a single cranial nerve can be identified and mapped. BUT this is not called dermatome.
What is the cranial nerve that supplies sensation to areas of the face?
Branches of CN V trigeminal
The herpes varicella zoster virus causes chickenpox. After you recover from chicken pox, the virus can enter your nervous system and lie dormant for years.

What are the 2 groups of somaesthetic modalities?
How are modalities that are essential to survival carried? What is the conduction rate?
How are modalities that increase detail carried? What is the conduction rate?
Review of Spinal Cord - Transverse Section

Are the sensory and motor pathways found in grey or white matter?
White matter
Functionally, what can the ascending/somatosensory tracts be divided into?
DCML Pathway:

What side of the body does the DCML pathway convey sensory info from? (i.e. ipsilateral or opposite)
Ipsilateral: If the lesion occurs in the spinal cord (which is most common), the sensory loss will be ipsilateral –> decussates at level of brainstem
How would a lesion of the DCML pathway present?
A loss of proprioception and fine touch. However, a small number of tactile fibres travel within the anterolateral system, and so the patient is still able to perform tasks requiring tactile information processing.