Lecture 4 Flashcards

1
Q

what are the main long tracts in the nervous system?

A

lateral cortico-spinal tract (motor)

posterior columns (sensory–vibration, joint position, fine touch)

anterolateral pathways (sensory–pain, temp, crude touch)

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2
Q

motor system (corticospinal tract) composed of UMN and LMN (two-neuron system)

A

ye

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3
Q

study slide 6

A

ye–the cortical origin for most motor pathways = primary motor cortexx; cortical termination for most primary somatosensory info is the primary somat. cortex

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4
Q

remember the x-sectional organization of the spinal cord; central gray matter and peripheral white matter

A

ye

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5
Q

describe the structure of greay matter in the spinal cord

A

dorsal/posterior horn for SENSORY
intermediate visceral horm for VISCERAL MOTOR
ventral - anterior horn = motor

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6
Q

describe organization of white matter

A

white matter regions called funiculi

in x-section their are 3 major areas: – post funiculus, dorsal column; lateral fun (lateral column); anterior funiculus (ventral column)

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7
Q

study slide 10

A

ye

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8
Q

impaired motor control symptoms?

A

weakness, paralysis, wasting, jerking, incoordination

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9
Q

spinal nerves control upper and lower limb, cranial nerves control face

A

ye

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10
Q

supplementary motor area functions to coordinate complex sequences of movement; transform potentiona motor actions into real movements (self initiated movement)

premotor cortex functions to integrate visual and somatosensory cues; potential motor actions driven by sensory input

A

ye

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11
Q

UMN vs LMN?

A

UMN: neuron that projects from the cerebral cortex to LMN in brainstem or anterior horn of spinal cord (corticobulbar or cortical spinal projections wheraeas LMN are PERIPHERAL nerves of the spinal cord/brainstem which originate in the anterior/ventral horn of teh spinal cord gray matter/brainstem to effector organs, like muscle

REMEMBER: UMNS DECUSSATE at the PYRAMIDS

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12
Q

describe the major descending tract projections

A

divided into two systems

85% of axons descend to brainstem and decussate at the pyramids (lateral) and travel into contralateral funiculus (lateral corticospinal tract)–>controls rt & lt; info remains unilateral

the other 15% of the UMNs DON’T decussate but travel the anteromedial spinal cord path–>therefore they are called the medial cortical spinal tract (control the core); info from UMNs innervate LMN bilaterally;

CLINICALLY RELEVANT bc any lesion that is limited to one side of the motor system will have a profound effect for the contralateral lateral CST but not the anterior CST or other medial motor systems

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13
Q

study slide 26

A

ye

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14
Q

motor control is primarily from the contralateral cerebral hemisphere. what are the exceptions?

A
  • the AXIAL muscle (close to the median line) are controlled by the same side of the hemisphere (controlled by the medial motor system)
  • the facial motor nucleus
  • complex movement involved both limbs which requires both hemis
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15
Q

what are the strongest intrahemispheral connections?

A

the ones connecting the:

-control of vertebral and abdominal musculature

they are routinely used bilaterally (connected?)

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16
Q

what are the weakest intrahemispheral linkages (commissural linkages)

A

controlling limb muscles (do not wanted strongly connected movements–e.g. play piano)

-routinely used independentl

17
Q

what is imporant about the internal capsule (post limb)

A

where all tracks ascend and descend –> infarct here will knock out motor and sensory for one side of the body

18
Q

study slide 30

A

ye

19
Q

the lateral corticospinal tract UMN runs from the frontal/parietal cortex (precentral gyrus) to the internal capsule (still in the cortex) to the BASIS PEDUNCULUS in the midbrain, to the BASIS PONTIS in the pons; from the basis pontis it runs to the pyramid in the rostral medulla; it DECUSSATES in the cervicomedullary junction and further travels down the dorsal white matter; synapses with LMN in anterior horn gray matter

A

all UMNs from the lateral corticospinal tract converge in the internal capsule

20
Q

what is the internal capsule made up of?

A

white matter; makes sense because the internal capsule is where all the axons (ascending and descending) converge, and white matter = axons

21
Q

what is a lacunar infarct?

A

infarct in internal capsule–all tracts ascend and descend, lost of motor and sensory for one side of the body; location determines functional deficit

important to get to emerge asap!

22
Q

describe weakness in a upper vs lower MN lesion

A

weakness is apparent in UMN lesions, after spastic paralysis subsides

weakness is also apparent in LMN lesions (flaccid paralysis)

23
Q

describe atrophy in UMN vs LMN lesion

A

not apparent in UMN lesions (in the long run it is) but is apparent in LMN lesions

24
Q

fasciculations in UMN vs LMN lesions?

A

not in UMN, present in LMN

25
Q

describe reflexes in UMN vs LMN lesions?

A

increased in UMN, decreased in LMN

26
Q

describe tone in UMN vs LMN lesions

A

present in UMN lesions, not in LMN

27
Q

describe paresis

A

weakness (very vague term)

28
Q

describe the suffix plegia

A

no movement

29
Q

describe the prefix para

A

means “both legs”

30
Q

hemiparesis = weakness on one side of body

A

ye

31
Q

describe the signs of UMN lesions

A
  • muscle weakness
  • hyperreflexia
  • increased tone
  • Babinski’s sign (fanning of toes)
32
Q

describe the signs of LMN lesions

A
  • muscle weakness
  • hyporeflexia
  • decreased tone
  • atrophy