Medulla oblongata?

Function?

Answer:
The Medulla oblongata is responsible for controlling several major autonomic functions of the body, including respiration, blood pressure, heart rate, and reflex arcs.

hope this help u
controls autonomic functions, relays info from brain and spinal cord
It controls Autonomic Functions and relays Nerve Signals Between the Brain and Spinal Cord
also called medulla the lowest section of the brain and the lowest portion of the brainstem. The medulla oblongata is connected by the pons to the midbrain and is continuous posteriorly with the spinal cord, near which it merges at the opening (foramen magnum) at the stand of the skull.

Like the cerebrum and cerebellum, the medulla consists of both myelinated (white matter) and unmyelinated…
Medulla Oblongata

Along with the cerebellum and the pons, the medulla oblongata make up that portion of the brain called the hindbrain. So required are the functions of the medulla oblongata that with its loss comes instant annihilation. Lying crossways between the higher brain and the body, it controls several rudimentary autonomic functions including respiration. Located on the lowest portion of the brain stem it looks like the swollen tip of the spinal chord.

Not merely does it serve as the main conduit for cheek impulses that enter and exit the higher neural systems, it also functions as the pathway for communication between the right and disappeared hemispheres.

It is within the medulla that both the sensory and motor neurons from respectively hemisphere cross over. This is why the right hemisphere controls the left side of the body and visa versa. As one of the most primitive areas of the brain, it regulates some of the more primary functions required for life. These include the involuntary processes of swallowing and digestion as in good health as breathing. It also regulates the heartbeat and the diameter of certain blood vessels-thus controlling blood flow. One could consider it the master control center for the autonomic twitchy system. Partnered with the cerebellum it controls movement and along next to the thalamus, it regulates states of arousal and sleep.
Causes dfficulty to the students of Physiology when answering questions by virtueof its spelling and later its functions.

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