1 / 53

LIMBIC SYSTEM

LIMBIC SYSTEM. Judith Molnár Department of Anatomy, Histology and Embryology , 20 18. Cerebral cortex. Isocortex – 6 layers (neocortex) Allocortex – 3-4 layers (limbic cortex) Archicortex Hippocampus, dentate gyrus Paleocortex

pmark
Download Presentation

LIMBIC SYSTEM

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. LIMBIC SYSTEM Judith Molnár Department of Anatomy, Histology and Embryology, 2018

  2. Cerebral cortex • Isocortex – 6 layers (neocortex) • Allocortex – 3-4 layers (limbic cortex) • Archicortex • Hippocampus, dentate gyrus • Paleocortex • Olfactory bulb, tuberculum olfactorium and the piriform cortex (amygdala, uncus, gyrus parahippocampalis ant.) • Periallocortex (transitional regions)

  3. archipallumpaleopalliumneopalliumstriatum

  4. Development of telencephalon

  5. arcipalliumpaleopallumneopalliumstriatum

  6. The brain stem and basal ganglia are the parts of the brain what is called reptilian brain, and this is the most ancient part of the brain. Supervise the balance, territority, sexual behaviour, feeding, and other vital functions. • The midlle part is the limbic system, what inludes the septum, amygdala, hypothalamus, hippocampal complex, and the cingulate gyrus, is the mammalian brain, which direct emotions, memory and social behaviour. • The primate brain is the cerebral cortex. The human brain is the latest „product” of evolution, what makes possible the higher functions, like language, planning, abstraction etc.

  7. Primates brain Inelligence Racionality Mammalian brain Memory Emocional Reptile brain Survival Instinctual

  8. Limbic system • Broca: 1878, limbic lobe • Cingulate gyrus, parahppocampal gyrus • Papez: 1937 • Hippocampal formation – emotions • MacLean: 1949 • Limbic system – racional behaviour

  9. The limbic system • The functions of the limbic system: storing, recalling memories, establishing the emotional state, linking the conscious, intellectual functions of the cortex with the unconscious and vegetative functions of the brainstem. • Cooperation between sensory, motor and association cortical areas makes it possible to perform tasks.The operation of the limbic system influences the will to perform the tasks

  10. Structures of the limbic system • Olfactory bulb • Hippocampus, dentate gyrus • Hypothalamus • Amygdala • Nucleus anterior thalami • Corpus mamillare • Septum pellucidum • Commissura habenularum • Cingulate gyrus • Parahippocampal gyrus • Entorhinal cortex • Limbic brain stem structures

  11. Structures of the limbic system

  12. Schematic illustration of the location of the limbic system between the diencephalon and the neocortical hemispheres

  13. Schematic illustration of the concentric main components of the limbic system.

  14. Connections of the limbic system • Fornix – hippocampus-corpus mamillare • Fasciculus mamllothalamicus • Fasciculus mamillotegmentalis • Stria terminalis – amygdala-hypothalamus • Stria medullaris thalami – septum-habenula • Striae longitudinales • Cingulum – hippocampus-prefrontalis cortex • Fasciculus retroflexus • Medial forebrain bandle

  15. Hippocampus • Amygdala

  16. Hippocampal formation • Dentate gyrus • Hippocampus • Subiculum

  17. Formation of the hyppocampal complex

  18. Histological structure of hippocampus • Layers • Stratum moleculare • Entorhinalis cortex afferents (perforant branches) • Mossy fibers from dentate nucleus • Schaffer collaterals (CA1 – CA3) • Stratum pyramidale • Stratum oriens • Basket cells

  19. Pyramidal cells of hippocampus The dendrites are parallel to one another resulting in summation of extracellular current flow and hyper-excitability seen in epilepsy. The pyramidal dendrites are perpendicular to the cortical surface resulting in different layers of cortex impinging at different points along the dendritic tree. The pyramidal dendrites contain dendritic spines that amplify currents (inputs) so that distant synaptic sites can more easily generate action potentials. The pyramidal cells (dendrites) receive inputs from basket cells that regulate excitability of the pyramidal cells through recurrent inhibition.

  20. Efferents of the entorhinal cortex • From the entorhinal cortex to hippocampus – two pathways • Perforants branches – dentate gyrus • Alvear branches – hippocampus

  21. Fornix • Alveus • Fimbria hippocampi • Crus fornicis • Commissura fornicis • Fornix • Columna fornicis • Corpus mamillare

  22. Fornix • Precommissural fornix: septal nuclei, ventral striatum and cingulate gyrus • Commissural fornix: contralateral hippocampus • Postcommissural fornix: columna fornicis, corpus mamillare, mamillothalamic tract, anterior thalamic nucleus

  23. Connections of the hippocampus

  24. Afferents of the hippocampus • Entorhinalcortex • Neocortex • Temporallobe • Orbitalcortex • Cingulate gyrus • Olfactorybulb • Fornix • Septalareas, hypothalamus • Amygdala • Contralateralhippocampus

  25. Hippocampus • The memories are not stored in the hippocampusban but the cognitive and sensory experiences are organized in long-term memory, stored in different brain regions. • Learning • Consolidation of memory • Long term memory

  26. Hippocampus • Hippocampus mediates many cognitive functions – reciprocal connections with cortex • Allocentric and spatial learning and memory – cognitive map • Decision-making mechanisms – predicting future events helps to make decisions

  27. Learning processes • When using spatial strategies, the hippocampus has greater activation. • In striatum, response strategies have greater activity. • There is a reverseratio of gray matter activity in striatum and hippocampus.

  28. Amygdala • Afferents • Lateral olfactory stria • Ventral amygdalofugal patways • Stria terminalis • Temporal lobe • Efferents • Ventral amygdalofugal pathways • Stria terminalis • Hippocampus • Entorhinal cortex • Dorsomedial thalamic nucleus

  29. The pathways of the amygdala • Ventralis amygdalofugal pathway • Nucleus accumbens septi • Globus pallidus, ventral striatum • Nucleus olfactorius anterior • Gyrus cinguli anterior part • Septum • Hypothalamus • Stria terminalis • Septalis area • Hypothalamus • Habenula • Contralateral amygdala • Direct connections • Hippocampus • Entorhinal cortex • Thalamus, dorsomedial nucleus • Brain stem

  30. Amygdala • Amygdala is an integration center: emotions, mediation between emotion-directed behavior and motivation. • It organizes appropriate emotional reactions triggered by information received from sensory organs. • Amygdala's efferentes to hypothalamus – visceral and somatic motor responses and prefrontal cortex – conscious emotional decisions.

  31. Gyrus cinguli • The gyrus cinguli plays a role in expressing emotions – gestures

More Related