- Spinocerebellar tract
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Caption = Spinocerebellar tract is #4, in blue at right.
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BrainInfoType = ancil
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The spinocerebellar tract is a set of axonal fibers originating in thespinal cord and terminating in the ipsilateralcerebellum . This tract conveys information to the cerebellum about limb and joint position (proprioception ).Origins of proprioceptive information
Proprioceptive information is obtained by Golgi tendon organs and muscle spindles.
* Golgi tendon organs consist of a fibrous capsule enclosing tendon fasciculi and bare nerve endings that respond to tension in the tendon by causing
action potential s in1β afferent neurones (relatively large, myelinated, quickly conducting).* Muscle spindles fibres are complicated systems of tension monitoring within muscles which result in information being carried via
1α neurones (larger and faster than 1β) (from bothnuclear bag fibres andnuclear chain fibres ) andII neurones (solely from nuclear chain fibres).All of these neurones are "first order" or "primary", are sensory (and thus have their cell bodies in the
dorsal root ganglion ) and pass throughRexed laminae layers I-VI of thedorsal horn , to form synapses with "second order" or "secondary" neurons in the layer just beneath the dorsal horn (layer VII)ubdivisions of the tract
The tract is divided into:
Pathway for dorsal and spinocuneocerebellar tracts
In the dorsal tract, the sensory neurones synapse in an area known as
Clarke's nucleus or "Clarke's column".This is a column of relay neurone cell bodies within the medial gray matter within the
spinal cord in layer VII (just beneath the dorsal horn), specifically between T4-C2. These neurones then send axons up thespinal cord and form synapses in the accessory (lateral)cuneate nucleus , lateral to the cuneate nucleus in the medulla.Below C2, relevant neurones pass into the
fasciculus gracilis (usually associated with the dorsal column-medial lemniscal system) until C2 where they synapse with Clarke's nucleus (leading to considerable caudal enlargement).From above T4, neurones enter the
fasciculus cuneatus directly and again synapse with neurones in the accessory cuneate nucleus. This pathway is known as the spinocuneocerebellar tract.The neurones in the accessory cuneate nucleus have axons leading to the ipsilateral cerebellum via the caudal cerebellar peduncle.
Pathway for ventral and rostral tracts
Some neurones instead form synapses with neurones in layer VII of L4-S3. Most of these fibres cross over to the contralateral lateral funiculus via the
anterior white commissure and proceed up the spinal cord to synapse with neurones in thesuperior cerebellar peduncle . The fibres then often cross over again within the cerebellum to end on the ipsilateral side.The Rostral Tract is similar but is uncrossed and enters the cerebellum through both the superior and
inferior cerebellar peduncle s.External links
* http://www.anatomyatlases.org/MicroscopicAnatomy/Section17/Plate17327.shtml
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