Lecture 10 9/6/23 Flashcards

1
Q

Where does the upper motor neuron have its origin/cell body?

A

in the brain

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2
Q

Where do the lower motor neurons have their origins/cell bodies?

A

in the spinal cord

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3
Q

What is a spinal cord intumescence?

A

a “swelling” of the spinal cord that enlarges the spinal cord to contain the LMN cell bodies

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4
Q

Where is the cervical-thoracic intumescence?

A

C6-T2

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5
Q

Where is the lumbo-sacral intumescence?

A

L4-S3

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6
Q

What are the signs of a lower motor neuron lesion?

A

-paresis or paralysis
-weak or absent spinal reflexes
-decreased muscle tone
-rapid, severe neurogenic atrophy

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7
Q

What is muscle tone?

A

the ability to prevent passive stretch of the muscle

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8
Q

Why is paralysis associated with LMN termed “flaccid” paralysis?

A

decreased muscle tone makes animal “floppy”

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9
Q

How do paresis and paralysis differ?

A

-paresis is a weakness, which can vary in severity
-paralysis is total loss of movement

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10
Q

Why do the spinal reflexes weaken/disappear with LMN lesions?

A

because the lesion is within the reflex arc that allows the reflex to normally occur

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11
Q

What are the two types of paresis?

A

-ambulatory: weak but walking independently
-nonambulatory: some movement, but not walking independently

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12
Q

How do paraplegia and tetraplegia differ?

A

paraplegia: paralysis of hind limbs only
tetraplegia: paralysis of all limbs

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13
Q

What is a shriveled muscle a sign of?

A

denervation atrophy

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14
Q

Which reflex maintains muscle tone?

A

muscle stretch reflex

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15
Q

What causes denervation atrophy?

A

-under normal conditions, small amounts of acetylcholine are released even when muscle is not contracting
-denervation leads to loss of acetylcholine release
-lack of acetylcholine release causes muscle to atrophy quickly

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16
Q

What are the signs of an upper motor neuron lesion?

A

-paresis or paralysis
-normal or increased spinal reflexes
-normal or increased muscle tone
-mild disuse atrophy

17
Q

Why is paralysis caused by UMN lesions known as “spastic” paralysis?

A

rigid muscle tone associated with UMN lesions leads to animal being paralyzed with contracted muscles

18
Q

Why are muscle tone and spinal reflexes increased with UMN lesions?

A

-under normal circumstances, UMN restricts the spinal reflexes of the LMN so that they are not exaggerated
-UMN lesions prevent this restriction and allow reflexes to be “full strength”

19
Q

What is clonus?

A

exaggerated patellar reflex caused by UMN; lower limb vibrates after reflex

20
Q

What is the crossed extensor reflex?

A

when testing the withdrawal reflex, the opposite limb will extend despite animal being recumbent