Motor control - Introduction Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 3 levels of motor control?

A

high
middle
low

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2
Q

What strucures are associated with high level motor control?

A

association neocortex

basal ganglia

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3
Q

What are the strucures associtaed wih middle level motor control?

A

motor cortex

cerebellum

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4
Q

What structures are associated with low level motor control?

A

brain stem

spinal cord

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5
Q

What do the lateral pathways control?

A

control voluntary movements

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6
Q

What do the ventromedial pathways control?

A

control posture and locomotion

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7
Q
A

A = ventromedial pathways
B = lateral pathways

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8
Q

Name the tracts in the lateral pathways?

A

corticospinal tracts

rubrospinal tract

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9
Q

Name the tracts in the ventromedial pathways?

A

tectospinal tract

vestibulospinal tract

pontine reticulospinal tract

medullary reticulospinal tract

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10
Q

What controls the lateral pathways?

A

under direct cortical control

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11
Q

What controls the ventromedial pathways?

A

under brain stem control

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12
Q

What areas are the motor cortex?

A

area 4 and 6

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13
Q

Where do 2/3 of the CST come rom?

A

frontal motor cortex areas 4 and 6

the rest are from the somatosensory

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14
Q

what does the somatosensory area help with motor?

A

e.g. a diver, tells you where you are in space, you need sensory input to help with motor function

visual, joint angle input within space an time

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15
Q

What does the right motor cortex control?

A

left side of body

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16
Q

Where do the CST axons synapse?

A

in the ventral horn and interneurons to control muscles

17
Q

Where do the RST start?

A

starts in the red nucleus of midbrain

18
Q

What happens when there is a lesion to the CST and the RST?

A

lose fine motor movements of arms and hands. cant move shoulders, elbows, wrist and fingers independently

You need both

19
Q

What does the RST take inputs from?

A

cortical areas, same as CST

20
Q

What happens in solely a CST lesion?

A

same limb deficits but after a few months functions reappear.

taken over by RST, because if now lesion RST - lose restored functions

21
Q

What type of neurones are present in the motor cortex and project via the CST?

A

LARGE PYRAMIDAL

22
Q
A
23
Q

The interneurones excite muscles but at the same time have to do what?

A

inhibit the opposing muscle

inhibits pools of antagonist motorneurones

if you want to flex the elbow, you will excite flexor muscles and inhibit extensor muscles

24
Q

What tracts control voluntary movements?

A

CST
RST