Spinoreticular tract
Details
Identifiers
Latintractus spinoreticularis
TA98A14.1.02.231
TA26105
FMA75693
Anatomical terminology

The spinoreticular tract (also paleospinothalamic pathway, or indirect pathway of the anterolateral system) is a partially decussating (crossed-over) four-neuron sensory pathway of the central nervous system. The tract transmits slow nociceptive/pain information (but thermal, and crude touch information as well) from the spinal cord to reticular formation which in turn relays the information to the thalamus via reticulothalamic fibers as well as to other parts of the brain (as opposed to the spinothalamic tract - the direct pathway of the anterolateral system - which projects from the spinal cord to the thalamus directly without such "layovers"). Most (85%) second-order axons arising from sensory C first-order fibers ascend in the spinoreticular tract - it is consequently responsible for transmitting "slow", dull, poorly-localised pain. By projecting to the reticular activating system (RAS), the tract also mediates arousal/alertness (including wakefulness) in response to noxious (harmful) stimuli. The tract is phylogenetically older than the spinothalamic ("neospinothalamic") tract.[1][page needed]

Anatomy

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Origin

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Axons of sensory group C nerve fibers first synapse with interneurons in the substantia gelatinosa of Rolando (lamina II), and lamina III of the posterior grey column of the spinal cord. These interneurons then synapse with second-order neurons in laminae V-VIII[1] Their axons then ascend in the spinal cord near the lateral spinothalamic tract.[2]

A minority of second-order axons of the spinoreticular tract bypass the reticular formation, and project directly to the intralaminar thalamic nuclei.[1][page needed]

Pathway

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The tract is bilateral: its fibers ascend predominately ipsilaterally, but a minority decussate in the anterior white commissure to ascend contralaterally. Second-order axons of this tract terminate by forming multiple synapses in the nuclei of the medullary, pontine, and mesencephalic reticular formation. The nuclei of the reticular formation lack somatotopic organisation (consequently, sensory stimuli conveyed via this pathway are indistinctly localised).[1][page needed]

The reticular formation in turn conveys the tract to:[1][page needed]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e Patestas, Maria A.; Gartner, Leslie P. (2016). A Textbook of Neuroanatomy (2nd ed.). Hoboken, New Jersey: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 202–203, 205, 307, 310–311, 313. ISBN 978-1-118-67746-9.
  2. ^ "Chapter 25:Neural Mechanisms of Cardiac Pain: The Anterolateral System". Archived from the original on 2010-08-16. Retrieved 2009-11-26.

Further reading

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  • Mark L. Latash (2008). Neurophysiological Basis of Movement. Human Kinetics. p. 171. ISBN 9780736063678.
  • Richard S. Snell (2005). Clinical Neuroanatomy. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. p. 150. ISBN 9780781759939.


📚 Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

Spinothalamic tract

tract, spinotectal tract, spinoreticular tract. There are two main parts of the spinothalamic tract: The lateral spinothalamic tract transmits pain and temperature

Spinomesencephalic pathway

ascending tracts in the spinal cord. These fibers include those of the spinomesencephalic tract, spinothalamic tract, and spinoreticular tract amongst others

List of regions in the human brain

Spinothalamic tract Lateral spinothalamic tract Anterior spinothalamic tract Spinomesencephalic tract Spinocerebellar tract Spino-olivary tract Spinoreticular tract

Spinohypothalamic tract

reticular formation (see: spinoreticular tract), and periaqueductal gray (see: spinomesencephalic tract). The fibers of this tract synapse with hypothalamic

Reticular formation

sensory tract conveying information in the opposite direction is the spinoreticular tract. Integrates information from the motor systems to coordinate automatic

Raphespinal tract

laminae V-VIII of spinal cord → spinoreticular tract → nucleus raphe magnus and gigantocellular raphe nucleus → Raphespinal tract → spinal trigeminal nucleus

Trigeminal nerve

The latter pathways are analogous to the spinomesencephalic and spinoreticular tracts of the spinal cord, which send pain-temperature information from

Pain and pleasure

spinothalamic tract, spinoreticular tract, spinomesencephalic tract, spinoparabrachial tract, spinohypothalamic tract, spinocervical tract, postsynaptic