Basal Ganglia Flashcards

1
Q

what is the hierarchy of motor control

A
  • motor cortex
    • direct motor output
    • corticospinal tract
    • damage causes paralysis and/or spasticity
  • cerebellum
    • modulates movement accuracy
    • receives afferent information from spinal cord
    • projects to sensorimotor areas of cortex
    • damage results in inaccurate / poorly timed movement (e.g. atoxia)
  • basal ganglia
    • strategic aspects of movement
    • no direct connections to spinal cord
    • reciprocal connections to almost all areas of cerebral cortex
    • damage results in problems initiating and terminating movement
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2
Q

what is the cortex loop

A
  • basal ganglia connections
    • widespread reciprocal connections to cerebral cortex (via thalamus)
    • not just involved in movement
    • behaviour and emotion
  • cerebellum connections
    • connections only to sensorimotor areas of cerebral cortex (via thalamus)
    • receives input from brainstem and spinal cord
    • involved almost exclusively with movement
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3
Q

what is the gross anatomy of the basal ganglia

A
  • the basal ganglia is a collection of 5 nuclei:
    • caudate
    • putamen
    • globus pallidus
      • internal (GPi)
      • external (GPe)
    • subthalamic nucleus (STN)
    • substantia nigra
      • pars compacta (SNc)
      • pars reticulata (SNr)
  • caudate and putamen are part of the striatum
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4
Q

what are the inputs

A
  • striatum (caudate and putamen)
  • receives direct and indirect (via thalamus) connections from cerebral cortex
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5
Q

what are the internal connections

A
  • striatum projects to:
    • globus pallidus (striatopallidial pathway)
    • substantia nigra (striatonigral pathway)
  • STN forms indirect pathway between GPe and SNr
  • GPi and SNr are the output centre of the basal ganglia and send inhibitory signals to the thalamus
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6
Q

what are the outputs

A
  • GPi and SNr
  • provide tonic inhibitory output to thalamus
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7
Q

what inputs and outputs make up the feedback loop

A
  • basal ganglia receives excitatory input from cerebral cortex which then sends inhibitory signals to the thalamus in turn suppressing motor cortical activity
  • excessive basal ganglia input results in slow movement and reduced input results in enhanced movement
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8
Q

what inputs and outputs make up the cortical loop

A
  • the cerebral cortex, basal ganglia and thalamus form a transcortical loop comprising 3 stages
    • striatum (putamen) receives vast array of inputs from the cerebral cortex (motor and sensory)
    • output from GPi and SNr project to thalamus (inhibitory signal)
    • inhibited thalamus projects to motor cortex, thus suppressing movement
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9
Q

what is the effect of dopamine on the striatum

A
  • dopamine originates from SNc
    • effects may be excitatory or inhibitory depending upon the receptor it binds to
  • dopamine has opposite actions in the direct and indirect pathways
    • excites direct pathway (D1R)
    • inhibits indirect pathway (D2R)
  • both effects disinhibit thalamic output thereby facilitating movement
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10
Q

what are the direct and indirect motor pathways

A
  • tonic inhibitory output from basal ganglia to thalamus
  • neurotransmitters
    • excitatory (glutamate, open arrows)
    • inhibitory (GABA, filled arrows)
    • mixed (dopamine, mixed arrows)
  • STN is a relay from the striatum (input) to the GPi / SNr (output), forming an indirect motor pathway
  • direct pathway involves two inhibitory synapses resulting in disinhibition, thereby facilitating movement
  • indirect pathway involves excitation of the inhibition, thereby suppressing movement
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11
Q

what is the basal ganglia pathology

A
  • basal ganglia disorders can be explained by an imbalance between the action of direct versus indirect pathways
    • Parkinson’s:
      • increased activation of indirect pathway (inhibitory) and decreased activation of direct pathway (excitatory)
      • movement is therefore suppressed
    • Huntington’s:
      • decreased activation of indirect pathway (inhibitory) and increased activation of direct pathway (excitatory)
      • movement is facilitated
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12
Q

what is Parkinson’s disease

A
  • affects ~1% of individuals over 50 years of age
  • loss of dopaminergic cells in substantia nigra
  • increases tonic inhibitory output of basal ganglia
  • symptoms include:
    • bradykinesia (slow movement)
    • akinesia (inability to initiate movement)
    • rigidity (increased muscle tone)
    • tremor
    • postural instability (stooped posture, right)
  • treatments include:
    • deep brain stimulation (disrupts function of STn, inhibits indirect pathway, thereby inhibiting thalamic inhibitor)
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13
Q

do Parkinson’s patients lack dopamine

A

PET scans shows reduced dopamine uptake in putamen

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14
Q

what is Huntington’s disease

A
  • rapid, jerky motions with no clear purpose (choreiform = dancelike)
  • patients often try to integrate these motions into more purposeful movements
  • caused by mutation of the Huntington gene resulting in selective atrophy of striatum
  • decreases activation of indirect pathway (inhibitory) resulting in movement facilitation
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15
Q

quick summary of basal ganglia disease mechanisms

A
  • Parkinson’s disease = hypokinetic
    • loss of dopaminergic cells from substantia nigra
    • overactive indirect pathway, underactive direct pathway
    • increased inhibition of thalamus
    • less movement
  • Huntington’s disease = hyperkinetic
    • atrophy of striatum
    • underactive indirect pathway
    • decreased inhibition of thalamus
    • more movement
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