Neurons (nerve cells) in the brain, spinal cord, and peripheral nerve
send axons (nerve fibers) up and down the spinal cord in spinal tracts.
These spinal tracts are called white matter because axons are coated
with a membrane called myelin and myelin appears white. In the spinal
cord, white matter is usually situated close to the surface of the
cord, arranged into several columns called the anterior, posterior, and
lateral columns. The spinal cord contains neurons located in the middle
part of the spinal cord. The areas of the spinal cord that contain
neurons is called gray matter. The gray matter is most abundant in the
parts of the spinal cord that connect to the arms and legs, called the
cervical and lumbosacral enlargements.
The spinal cord transmits
signals for sensations and to control movement, as well as breathing,
bladder, bowel, sweating, blood pressure, sexual, and other essential
functions of the body. The spinal cord contains neuronal circuitry for
reflexes that control all these functions. Over 20 million axons ascend
and descend in the human spinal cord, organized into spinal tracts
named according to their source and destination. For example, the
spinal tract that sends axons from the cerebral cortex to the spinal
cord is called the corticospinal tract. Likewise, the tract that sends
axons from the red nucleus in the midbrain to the spinal cord is called
the rubrospinal tract. The sensory tract that transmits pain and
temperature sensation from the spinal cord to the thalamus is called
the spinothalamic tract. Some tracts, however, are named by their
position. For example, the posterior column transmits sensory
information from the spinal roots to the brainstem.
Neurons
that send axons to muscles are called motoneurons while neurons that
send axons to other neurons are called interneurons. Motoneurons and
interneurons receive information from descending axons and sensory
axons. When you activate sensory input to the spinal cord by tapping a
tendon, the activity turns on motoneurons that cause the muscle of that
tendon to contract. This is called a monosynaptic reflex. To signal the
muscles to move, the brain sends information directly to motoneurons or
indirectly through interneurons that can either excite or inhibit other
neurons.
Sensory neurons send axons from the spinal cord to
the brain. Some sensory axons go from peripheral nerve neurons in
posterior sensory ganglia located just outside of the spinal column.
Posterior sensory ganglion neurons send an T-shaped axon to the body
where it collects information like touch and movement while the other
end goes into the spinal cord and branches. One branch goes into the
gray matter where it activates motoneurons and the other end goes up
the posterior column all the way to the brainstem.
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