lecture 29 - motor systems: cerebrum Flashcards

1
Q

where does the lateral corticospinal tract decussate?

A

at the level of the caudal medulla

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2
Q

where does the lateral corticospinal tract project?

A

to the limb muscles

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3
Q

how does the lateral corticospinal tract project?

A

contralateral

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4
Q

where does the ventral corticospinal tract project?

A

to the axial muscles

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5
Q

how does the ventral corticospinal tract project?

A

bilateral

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6
Q

where does the corticobulbar tract project?

A

to cranial nerve (V, VII, IX, X, XI, XII) nuclei

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7
Q

how does the corticobulbar tract project?

A
  • bilateral: upper face (more common)

- contralateral: lower face (stronger)

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8
Q

list the 6 motor and somatosensory cortical areas

A
  • prefrontal cortex
  • premotor cortex
  • supplementary motor cortex
  • primary motor cortex
  • somatosensory cortex
  • parietal association cortex
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9
Q

list the posterior parietal cortical areas

A
  • somatosensory cortex

- parietal association cortex

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10
Q

what are the functions of posterior parietal cortical areas?

A

multi-sensory integration and motor planning

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11
Q

what are the functions of supplementary motor areas

A
  • mental rehearsal
  • motor imagery
  • motor sequences
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12
Q

simple finger flexion involves which brain areas?

A

primary motor cortex, somatosensory cortex

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13
Q

sequential finger movements involve which brain areas?

A

supplementary motor cortex

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14
Q

is the supplementary motor cortex unimanual or bimanual?

A

bimanual

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15
Q

what are the functions of the premotor cortex?

A
  • selection of action
  • sensory to motor associations - e.g. greenlight/proceed, redlight/stop
  • observation of action
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16
Q

what are the functions of the prefrontal cortex with respect to movement?

A

executive functions (highly dextrous movements)

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17
Q

which brain area provides the largest contribution to the corticospinal tract?

A

primary motor cortex

18
Q

does the primary motor cortex contain Betz cells?

A

yes - aka large corticospinal cells

19
Q

where do corticoneurons synapse

A

directly onto motoneurons

20
Q

what are corticoneurons innervating?

A

mainly distal limb musculature

21
Q

motor humunculi are:

A

somatotopically organized - i.e., have large face and hand representations

22
Q

describe how the primary motor cortex projects

A

contralateral

23
Q

describe the lateral corticospinal tract’s path

A

cortex –> corona radiata –> internal capsule –> basis pedunculi (midbrain) –> pyramidal tract –> pyramidal decussation –> sc

24
Q

describe the ventral corticospinal tract’s path

A

cortex –> corona radiata –> internal capsule –> basis pedunculi (midbrain) –> pyramidal tract –> sc

25
Q

describe the corticospinal tract at the level of the internal capsule in more detail

A
  • located in the posterior limb

- from anterior to posterior: face (genu), arm, trunk, leg

26
Q

describe the corticospinal tract at the level of the midbrain in more detail

A
  • located in the basis pedunculi (base of midbrain)

- from anterior to posterior: face, arm, trunk, leg

27
Q

describe the corticospinal tract at the level of the sc in more detail

A
  • trunk located in ventral corticospinal tract just beside the anterior fissure
  • arm, trunk, leg located in the lateral corticospinal tract
28
Q

describe the difference between a corticobulbar lesion and Bell’s Palsy

A
  • corticobulbar: upper motor neuron type facial weakness

- BP: lower-motor neuron type facial weakness

29
Q

describe the direction and target of corticobulbar projections to CN XI

A

ipsilateral, sternomastoid

30
Q

describe the direction and target of corticobulbar projections to CN XII

A

bilateral, tongue muscles

31
Q

describe the direction and target of corticobulbar projections to CN IX

A

bilateral, muscles for swallowing and vocalizing

32
Q

describe the direction and target of corticobulbar projections to CN X

A

bilateral, muscles for swallowing and vocalizing

33
Q

describe the direction and target of corticobulbar projections to CN VII

A

bilateral (upper), contralateral (lower), muscles of facial expression

34
Q

describe the direction and target of corticobulbar projections to CN V

A

bilateral, temporalis, masseter, lateral pterygoid, medial pterygoid

35
Q

is weakness a sign for upper motor neuron lesions? lower motor neuron lesions?

A

yes both

36
Q

is atrophy a sign for upper motor neuron lesions? lower motor neuron lesions?

A

lower only (but mild atrophy may develop in upper due to disuse)

37
Q

are fasciculations a sign for upper motor neuron lesions? lower motor neuron lesions?

A

lower only

38
Q

describe reflexes as a sign for upper motor neuron lesions and lower motor neuron lesions

A
upper = increased (with acute lesions may decreased)
lower = decreased
39
Q

describe tone as a sign for upper motor neuron lesions and lower motor neuron lesions

A
upper = increased (with acute lesions may decreased)
lower = decreased
40
Q

describe Babinski reflex test

A

tickle bottom on foot at heal:

  • toes down means the corticospinal tract comes down (good)
  • toes up = babinski sign - upper motor neuron lesion (not good)