SPINOTHALAMIC TRACTS NEET PG MCQ

25/07/2025 6 min

Listen "SPINOTHALAMIC TRACTS NEET PG MCQ"

Episode Synopsis

summary of your podcast episode on **Spinothalamic Tracts for NEET PG MCQs**—crafted like something you might hear while tuning in 🎙️:---**🎧 NEET PG Neuro QuickPod: Spinothalamic Tract Essentials**_"Welcome back, future doctors! In today’s brain-hugging episode, we’re diving into a super high-yield topic—Spinothalamic tracts. This is one of those core neuro pathways that pops up across PYQs and is a must-know for NEET PG MCQs. So let’s break it down, mnemonic-style and clinically sharp!"_🧠 **Segment 1: Quick Anatomy Refresher**- The spinothalamic tract carries **pain, temperature, crude touch, and pressure** sensations.- It consists of two parts: **anterior spinothalamic tract (touch & pressure)** and **lateral spinothalamic tract (pain & temperature)**.- Originates from dorsal horn neurons → crosses to the opposite side at the spinal level → ascends to the thalamus → projects to somatosensory cortex.📌 **NEET PG Alert: MCQ Trap Watch**- **Lesion localization**: A right-sided spinal cord lesion affects the **left-sided pain/temp** due to decussation.- Common question: _"Loss of pain and temperature on left below T10. Where’s the lesion?"_🧪 **PYQ Highlights**- NEET PG 2022: Asked about loss of pain/temp below lesion level—correct answer involved lateral spinothalamic tract.- NEET PG 2019: Image-based MCQ—match sensory pathway with lost modality.🧬 **Clinical Correlations**- Conditions like **syringomyelia** (central canal cyst) first affect spinothalamic tract fibers → leads to dissociated sensory loss.- A favorite examiner trick: showing bilateral loss of pain/temp in a cape-like distribution.💡 **Mnemonic Corner** _"Pain and Temp cross early, touch and pressure take their time."_ Think: **'Lateral Love Pain'** (Lateral spinothalamic = pain/temp), **‘Anterior Affection Touch’** (Anterior = touch/pressure).✅ **MCQ Strategy**- Track decussation points.- Don’t mix up dorsal column vs spinothalamic pathways (watch for distractors).- Look for patterns of sensory loss vs motor loss._"That’s all for today’s neuro nugget. Remember, repetition is the key—and now you’re spinothalamic-savvy! Keep smashing those MCQs and we’ll catch you in the next mini-review!"_