Motor Control - Cortex and Allied Structures Flashcards

1
Q

Describe in more detail the cortical and sub-cortical levels of integration.

A

Cortical level - lateral cerebellum + lateral SC pathways; phylogenetically new; distal limbs (fingers); fine controlled movement

Sub-cortical - medial and ventral SC pathways and medial cerebellum; phylogenetically old - proximal limbs - posture - primitive

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2
Q

Describe the rubrospinal motor tract.

A
  • Info from motor cortex and cerebellum through red nucleus
  • lateral motor system, despite being more primitive
  • feeds to spinal CPG
  • sets baseline posture, but influenced by motor cortex
  • UMN lesions result in spastic posture
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3
Q

How do UMN lesions cause spastic posture?

A

Rubro-spinal or reticulospinal tract set baseline posture without influence from motor cortex as it has been damaged e.g from a stroke

  • stroke in L brain, R upper limb flexed, R lower limb extended
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4
Q

Describe the reticular and vestibulospinal motor tracts.

A
  • Reticular nucleii - pons excitatory to stretch reflexes in spinal cord; medulla inhibitory to stretch reflexes; antigravity + posture
  • Vestibular nucleii - receive input from vestibular apparatus from inner ear
  • position of head, neck, posture
  • Both have input from cortex and cerebellum - maintain balance
  • Both medial tracts
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5
Q

What is included in the premotor cortex and supplementary motor cortex? What is their role?

A

Hand skills, head rotation, contralateral eye movements, Broca’s area (word formation)

  • mostly in frontal lobe
  • involved in planning movement + specific, fine types of movements
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6
Q

What other area of cortex send info to motor cortex?

A
  • Somatosensory cortex
  • Visual cortex
  • Auditory cortex
  • Thalamus (tactile signals, joint and muscle signals, signals from cerebellum, basal ganglia
  • Wernicke’s area (understanding of words)
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7
Q

What is the role of the motor cortex?

A
  • the manager
  • command signals which trigger complex movements patterns - involves activation or inhibition of multiple spinal cord motor neurones
  • control of movements, not individual muscles
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8
Q

What is a lower motor neuron?

A

Motor nerve innervating motor unit - LMN

- may receive input from many UMNs

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9
Q

What makes up the basal ganglia?

A

groups of neurons

  • putamen
  • caudate nucleus
  • subthalamic nucleus
  • substantia nigra
  • globus pallidus
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10
Q

Where do virtually all motor fibres pass through?

A

Internal capsule - the space between caudate nucleus and putamen

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11
Q

Describe the putamen circuit.

A

Loop from cerebral cortex and back via putamen - globus pallidus - subthalamic nucleii - substantia nigra, thalamus

  • pre-programmed movement patterns
  • inhibitory
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12
Q

What problems can occur with damage to putamen circuit?

A

Athetosis (wriggling), ballismus (large, exaggerated movement), chorea (dance-like movement)

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13
Q

Describe the caudate circuit.

A

Cognitive control of movement

- inhibitory

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14
Q

What is common to both the caudate and putamen circuit?

A

An excitatory dopaminergic pathway from substantia nigra to striatum (caudate nucleus + putamen)

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15
Q

How are these basal ganglia circuits affected by Parkinson’s?

A

Inhibition of inhibition pathway from striatum to GP turned off and inhibition of excitation pathway from SN to striatum due to degeneration of neurons
- Results in less movement as movement initiation is compromised

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16
Q

What is the role of the different regions of the cerebellum?

A

Movement co-processor, error corrector
Vestibulocerebellum - equilibrium, eye movements
Spinocerebellum - receives efference copy (what brain wants body to do), proprioception (what body is acc doing), makes the 2 the same
Cerebrocerebellum - planning movements, movement accuracy, learned skills

17
Q

What are the signs of vestibular and spinocerebellar problems?

A
  • Wide stance
  • Swaying while standing
  • Inappropriate nystagmus
  • Ataxic gait
18
Q

What are the signs of cerebrocerebellar problems?

A
  • Movement accuracy compromised (dysmetria, past pointing)
  • Decomposition of movements
  • Intention tremor
  • Initiation delay
  • Kinaesthetic learning ability lost