Fasciculus cuneatus – Function and Anatomy
The fasciculus cuneatus is a nerve fiber tract in the spinal cord that transmits touch, pressure, vibration, and position sense from the arms and upper trunk to the brain.
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The fasciculus cuneatus is a nerve fiber tract in the spinal cord that transmits touch, pressure, vibration, and position sense from the arms and upper trunk to the brain.
What is the Fasciculus cuneatus?
The fasciculus cuneatus (Latin for wedge-shaped bundle) is an ascending sensory nerve fiber tract located in the posterior (dorsal) part of the spinal cord, specifically within the posterior funiculus (dorsal column). It carries fine sensory information from the upper half of the body -- including the arms, hands, and upper trunk -- upward to the brain. Together with the adjacent fasciculus gracilis, which carries information from the lower body, it forms the dorsal column-medial lemniscus pathway, one of the most important sensory systems of the central nervous system.
Anatomy and Pathway
The fasciculus cuneatus is located in the dorsal spinal cord, lateral to the fasciculus gracilis. It consists of the central axons of first-order sensory neurons whose cell bodies reside in the dorsal root ganglia. These axons enter the spinal cord via the dorsal roots and ascend ipsilaterally (on the same side) within the posterior funiculus.
- Origin: Dorsal roots of spinal cord segments C1 to T6 (cervical and upper thoracic levels)
- Pathway: Ascending in the dorsolateral posterior funiculus of the spinal cord
- Target structure: Nucleus cuneatus in the medulla oblongata
At the nucleus cuneatus in the medulla oblongata, the first-order neuron synapses onto the second-order neuron. The fibers then cross to the opposite side (decussation) and continue as the medial lemniscus to the thalamus, from where the information is relayed to the somatosensory cortex of the cerebral hemisphere.
Function
The fasciculus cuneatus is responsible for transmitting several modalities of sensory information from the upper body:
- Fine touch: Discriminative (epicritic) tactile sensation
- Pressure: Perception of mechanical pressure on skin and tissue
- Vibration sense: Detection of vibrations, for example from a tuning fork
- Proprioception: Awareness of joint position and movement (deep sensibility)
- Two-point discrimination: Ability to distinguish two closely spaced points of contact on the skin
Clinical Relevance and Disorders
Damage to the fasciculus cuneatus causes characteristic neurological deficits predominantly affecting the ipsilateral (same-side) upper body. Common causes of dorsal column lesions include:
- Subacute combined degeneration of the spinal cord: Due to vitamin B12 deficiency, leading to demyelination of the dorsal columns
- Spinal cord trauma: Injuries to the cervical spinal cord, for example from accidents
- Multiple sclerosis: Demyelination of dorsal column fibers due to inflammatory processes
- Tabes dorsalis: Late-stage syphilis with degeneration of the posterior columns
- Spinal tumors or ischemia
Clinical signs of fasciculus cuneatus dysfunction include:
- Loss of vibration sense (pallhypesthesia)
- Loss of position sense (bathyhypesthesia)
- Sensory disturbances such as tingling or numbness in the arms and hands
- Sensory ataxia (unsteady gait due to impaired proprioception)
- Positive Romberg sign (swaying or falling when standing with eyes closed)
Diagnosis
The function of the fasciculus cuneatus is assessed during the neurological examination using targeted sensory tests:
- Tuning fork test: Assessment of vibration sense over bony prominences
- Position sense testing: Passive movement of finger or toe joints
- Romberg test: Balance test performed with the eyes closed
- MRI of the spinal cord: Imaging to detect structural lesions
- Somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs): Electrophysiological testing of dorsal column function
References
- Kandel, E. R., Schwartz, J. H., Jessell, T. M. et al. - Principles of Neural Science. 5th edition. McGraw-Hill, 2013.
- Standring, S. (ed.) - Gray's Anatomy: The Anatomical Basis of Clinical Practice. 41st edition. Elsevier, 2015.
- Purves, D., Augustine, G. J., Fitzpatrick, D. et al. - Neuroscience. 6th edition. Sinauer Associates / Oxford University Press, 2018.
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Related search terms: Fasciculus cuneatus + Fasciculus cuneatus spinal cord + posterior funiculus cuneatus