Spinal cord Flashcards

Review of spinal cord and its arrangements

1
Q

What is the role of the upper motor systems?

A

Send info to spinal cord and brain stem; initiate voluntary movements

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2
Q

Where are the upper motor systems located?

A

Motor cortex and brainstem; either directly or under the influence of other brain areas that control movements

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3
Q

What are the lower motor systems?

A

Grey matter of spinal cord and brainstem; contain lower motor neurones and lower circuit neurones

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4
Q

How long and thick is the spinal cord?

A

44cm long; 6-13mm thick

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5
Q

Where is the spinal cord situated in spinal column?

A

Vertebral foramen

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6
Q

Where does the spinal cord end, and why?

A

L1/L2; spinal cord cells don’t grow more as body grows

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7
Q

In a cross section of the spinal cord, what is the middle part which looks like an H?

A

Neurones and other cells (grey matter)

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8
Q

In a cross section of the spinal cord, what is the outside of the cord?

A

Fibres (white matter)

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9
Q

Within the spinal segment, what is the anterior part of the cord called?

A

Ventral horn; contains motor nuerones

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10
Q

Within the spinal segment, what is the posterior part of the cord called?

A

Dorsal horn; contains sensory neurones

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11
Q

What is a neural prosthesis?

A

A system to bypass the output from the damaged spinal cord; in order to do this we have to decode the signals from the brain

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12
Q

What is a motor pool?

A

All the motor neurones that innervate a single muscle; each fibre innervated by a single neurone

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13
Q

Why do the cervical and lumbar spine have more motor pools?

A

More controlled movements, thus more muscles

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14
Q

Why does the thoracic spine have fewer motor pools?

A

Less controlled movements, thus fewer muscles

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15
Q

What is the somatotopic organisation of lower motor neurones?

A

Proximal muscle neurones located medially; distal muscle neurones located laterally

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16
Q

What is a motor unit?

A

A single neurone innervating multiple muscle fibres

17
Q

What are the distinguishing characteristics of slow motor unit?

A

Small motor neurones
Innervate relatively few muscle fibres
Generate small forces
Innervate small, slow twitch muscle fibres

18
Q

What are the distinguishing characteristics of fast fatiguable motor unit?

A

Large motor neurones
Innervate larger, more powerful units
Generate more force
Innervate larger, fast fatiguable muscle fibres

19
Q

What are the distinguishing characteristics of fast fatigue-resistant motor unit?

A

Motor units of intermediate size

Not as fast as FF units but less fatiguable

20
Q

How does physical activity affect types of motor unit?

A

Due to muscle plasticy, different training can change the type of muscle fibre present in the exercised muscle; paralysis transforms slow twitch fibres to fast twitch

21
Q

What is implication of more neurones innervating a single muscle?

A

Finer movements

22
Q

What are reflexes?

A

Actions produced at the level of the spinal cord

23
Q

What is the patellar reflex?

A

Monosynaptic

24
Q

What is the withdrawal reflex?

A

Polysynaptic