We're viewing this slice of the spinal cord from the bottom right? The left right labels always mix me up.
Also you can extrapolate that the fibers causing his pain have already crossed over because this is a cervical spine section, and the pain he's having is thoracic/lumbar
Here's a picture that really helped: https://www.google.com/search?q=cervical+vs+thoracic+vs+lumbar+spinal+cord+slices&rlz=1C1CHBF_enUS801US801&sxsrf=ALeKk003suIj4Gt8w_cxQguy33bsJi7w3g:1590347215846&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjSqfqGmc3pAhXldN8KHUIlDYoQ_AUoAXoECA0QAw&biw=1280&bih=864#imgrc=EMrFYHUe8M5ReM
The thing is, the spinothalamic tract crosses 2 vertebral levels up and then decussates at the anterior white commissure to get from the right to the left, so how do I know which vertebral level I'd be working on this guy?
If you assume that because the pt has R-sided back and ab pain somewhere in the lower thoracic, and you know that this slice of cord is above that because it has a posterior intermediate sulcus present (i.e. has both a gracilus and cuneatus track), then you know that the spinal cord slice is likely above where the pain is, therefore the spinothalamic has crossed over already.
What is the area labeled 'G' and 'C'? And more characters?
you are looking at this bottom up (as if person is on stomach) so L is patient L and R is patient R. This has cuneate and gracilis tracts, which means it is higher up in thoracic spinal cord and so the spinothalamic has already entered and crossed. So the pathway is from the dorsal root ganglion on R side -> crosses AWC -> goes up to brain at left "H".
FA 2020 PG 508 he specifically points to right ascending lateral spinothalamic tract bet. sacral cervical ---for pain and temperature
submitted by โsympathetikey(1600)
Pain & temperature fibers for the right side come in on the dorsal right side, cross at the anterior white commisure, and travel up in the Spinothalamic tract.
https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-B4YXuXT68ts/V2Wu-kGlZyI/AAAAAAAAljk/3j2iHrI9hQ4/s640/blogger-image--1680479964.jpg