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  2. Brainstem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brainstem

    The facial sensations have similar pathways and will travel in the spinothalamic tract and the DCML. Descending tracts are the axons of upper motor neurons destined to synapse on lower motor neurons in the ventral horn and posterior horn. In addition, there are upper motor neurons that originate in the brainstem's vestibular, red, tectal, and ...

  3. Descending neuron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Descending_neuron

    A descending neuron is a neuron that conveys signals from the brain to neural circuits in the spinal cord (vertebrates) or ventral nerve cord (invertebrates). As the sole conduits of information between the brain and the body, descending neurons play a key role in behavior.

  4. Medullary pyramids (brainstem) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medullary_pyramids_(brainstem)

    The corticospinal tracts are on the anterior surface of the pyramids. These tracts transport motor signals that originated in the precentral gyrus and travelled through the internal capsule to the medulla oblongata and pyramids. Extrapyramidal tracts are those motor tracts that do not traverse the medullary pyramids.

  5. Pyramidal tracts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pyramidal_tracts

    The pyramidal tracts include both the corticobulbar tract and the corticospinal tract.These are aggregations of efferent nerve fibers from the upper motor neurons that travel from the cerebral cortex and terminate either in the brainstem (corticobulbar) or spinal cord (corticospinal) and are involved in the control of motor functions of the body.

  6. Solitary nucleus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solitary_nucleus

    The solitary nucleus (SN) (nucleus of the solitary tract, nucleus solitarius, or nucleus tractus solitarii) is a series of neurons whose cell bodies form a roughly vertical column of grey matter in the medulla oblongata of the brainstem. Their axons form the bulk of the enclosed solitary tract. The solitary nucleus can be divided into different ...

  7. Lateral corticospinal tract - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lateral_corticospinal_tract

    The lateral corticospinal tract is a descending motor pathway that begins in the cerebral cortex, decussates in the pyramids of the lower medulla [1] (also known as the medulla oblongata or the cervicomedullary junction, which is the most posterior division of the brain [2]) and proceeds down the contralateral side of the spinal cord.

  8. Hypothalamospinal tract - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypothalamospinal_tract

    The tract descends through the periaqueductal gray, [5] through the dorsal longitudinal fasciculus, [1] and adjacent to the reticular formation. [5] In the brainstem, it descends in the lateral tegmentum of the midbrain, pons, and medulla oblongata. In the spinal cord, it descends in the dorsolateral quadrant of the lateral funiculus. [6]

  9. Internal capsule - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internal_capsule

    The internal capsule is a paired white matter structure, as a two-way tract, carrying ascending and descending fibers, to and from the cerebral cortex. The internal capsule is situated in the inferomedial part of each cerebral hemisphere of the brain. It carries information past the subcortical basal ganglia.