Upper Motor Neurones and Control of Movement Flashcards Preview

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Flashcards in Upper Motor Neurones and Control of Movement Deck (24)
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1
Q

describe the system which allows smooth walking action without input from upper motor neurones or motor cortex

A

2 adjacent excitatory pacemaker interneurons
- 1 involved in extension, 1 flexion
pacemaker interneurone excites efferent nerve to flexor muscle but also excited another inhibitory neurone which inhibits other pacemaker interneurone involved with extension, therefore flexion is excited and extension is inhibited
after a brief time delay, the inhibited pacemaker interneurone involved with extension then fires an AP which excites an inhibitory interneurone which inhibits the pacemaker interneurone involved with flexion, therefore extension is excited and flexion is inhibited
this cycle continues to allow smooth walking

2
Q

there are 3 levels of hierarchy of motor control, what is the highest level?

A

highest level is involved with strategy of movement

structures involved = neocrotical association areas and basal ganglia

3
Q

middle level of motor control?

A

tactical (how you will perform the plan made by higher level - what sequence of muscle contractions etc)
structures = motor cortex and cerebellum
(tactics must be stored in memory for a time)

4
Q

low level of motor control?

A

involved in execution (activation of motor pools and interneuron pools that command the movement and make essential postural adjustments - to prevent falling while performing movement etc)
structures = brain stem and spinal cord

5
Q

descending spinal tracts arise from where?

A

cerebral cortex (area concerned with motor comman - precentral gyrus - brodmann areas 6 and 4)

6
Q

descending spinal tracts are concerned with what?

A
control of movement
muscle tone
spinal reflexes
spinal autonomic functions
modulation of sensory transmission to higher centres
7
Q

2 divisions of descending pathways?

A
lateral pathways
- lateral corticospinal tract
- rubrospinal tract
ventromedial pathways
- pontine reticulospinal tract
- meduallry reticulospinal tract
- lateral vestibulospinal tract
- tectospinal tract
- ventral corticospinal tract
8
Q

features and functions of lateral descending pathways?

A

under control from the cerebral cortex
important for voluntary movement of distal muscles (particularly discrete, skilled movements - e.g fractioned movement of arms - hands - fingers)

9
Q

damage to what pathways can cause the loss of fractionated movement?

A

lateral pathways

- couldn’t move fingers and other joints independently, everything would move as one when trying to perform a task

10
Q

functions of ventromedial pathways?

A

not under direct control of motor cortex
under control from nuclei in the brainstem
important for control of posture and locomotion (not so much involved in in fine, skilled or fractioned movement)

11
Q

what is the major lateral pathway and describe its path?

A

corticospinal tract
cell bodies in motor cortex (BAs 4 and 6) and somatosensory areas of parietal cortex
axons course to the base of the medulla forming a tract (medullary pyramid)
85% of fibres cross here at the decussation of pyramids to form the lateral corticospinal tract (most important)
other 15% stay ipsilateral and form the ventral corticospinal tract and decussate more caudally

12
Q

where do axons of the corticospinal tract terminate?

A

dorsolateral region of the ventral horn of the spinal cord

- area of LMNs and interneurons controlling distal muscles (particularly flexors)

13
Q

describe the more minor lateral pathway

A

rubrospinal tract
cell bodies located in red nucleus (receives input from motor cortex and cerebellum)
axons decussate at the ventral tegmental decussation and descend the spinal cord ventrolateral to the lateral corticospinal tract, terminating in the ventral horn

14
Q

functions of rubrospinal tract?

A

exerts control over limb flexors by exciting LMNs of these muscles

15
Q

lesions of the lateral pathways is associated with what symptoms?

A

loss of fractionated movement
slowing and impairment of accuracy of voluntary movements
little effect on normal posture (sitting, standing etc)

16
Q

lesion of the corticospinal tract specifically causes what symptoms?

A

initially causes deficits as profound as a lesion of the whole lateral pathways but over time, major recovery can occur as rubrospinal tract is preserved and can compensate for functions
only permanent deficit = weakness of distal flexors and inability of move finger independently)

17
Q

describe the path of vestibulomedial pathway (vestibulospinal tract)?

A

cell bodies in vestibular nuclei (lateral and medial) that receive input via CN VIII, cerebellar input also important
axons from lateral vestibular nucleus (Deiter’s) descend ipsilaterally as the latral vestibulospinal tract as far as the lumbar spinal cord
- holds body upright and balanced postire by fascilitating extensor MNs of antigravity muscles
axons from medial vestibular nucleus descend as the medial vestibulospinal tract as far as the cervical spinal cord
- these activate cervical spinal circuits that control neck and back muscles guiding head movements

18
Q

optic tectum is another name for what?

A

superior colliculus

19
Q

main inputs to superior colliculus?

A

axons of retina
axons of neurones which are in visual analysing areas of visual cortex
also has input about sound and from somatosensory systems

20
Q

describe the path of the tectospinal tract?

A

cell bodies in the superior colliculus
axons decussate in the dorsal tegmental decussation and descend close to the midline as the tectospinal tract to the cervical spinal cord influencing muscles of neck, upper trunk and shoulders

21
Q

superior colliculus acts as what?

A

map of external world guiding

e.g - orientation of the head and eyes to an important new visual stimulus

22
Q

both the pontine (medial) and medullary (lateral) reticulospinal tracts arise from where and are controlled by what?

A

arise from reticular formation (diffuse mesh of neurones located along length and at the core of the brainstem)
controlled by descending signals from the cortex

23
Q

describe the pontine reticulospinal tract?

A

descends ipsilaterally
enhances antigravity reflexes of the spinal cord
helps to maintain a standing posture by facilitating contraction of the extensors of the lower limbs

24
Q

describe the medullary reticulospinal tract?

A

descends bilaterally
opposes the action of the medial tract
releases antigravity muscles from the reflex control