Motor areas Flashcards

Identifying the roles of the motor areas of the brain and how motor issues are caused from damage

1
Q

How were the cortical areas identified initially?

A

They are anatomically distinct

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2
Q

What are the primary motor areas?

A

M1/motor cortex/area 4

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3
Q

What are the large cells in layer V of the motor cortex?

A

Cortical spinal cells, which are distinguishing features of the motor cortex and are common in all animals

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4
Q

Why is the primary motor area regarded so?

A

Is the area where movement can be elicited with the lowest threshold of stimulation

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5
Q

How can you map somatotophy?

A

Electrodes; transcranial magnetic stimulation; neuroimaging

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6
Q

Is the somatotophy in all humans the same?

A

No, has same general pattern but each person has variations

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7
Q

What is the relationship between the motor cortex and movement?

A

Very close; fire around 5-100ms before movement

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8
Q

What does the motor cortex control in movement?

A

Force, direction, extent, speed

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9
Q

What are the non-primary motor areas?

A

Pre-motor cortex/lateral area 6; supplementary motor cortex/medial area 6; cingulate motor areas/areas 23 and 24

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10
Q

What do the PMA and SMA control?

A

Complex patterns and sequences of movements; movement selection and preparation; target encoding

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11
Q

What are the main inputs for the PMA and SMA?

A

From other motor areas

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12
Q

What is the difference in stimulation of PMA/SMA and M1?

A

Need higher thresholds of stimulation to PMA/SMA to produce movement

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13
Q

What is the difference in output of SMA and M1?

A

Output from SMA to weaker neurones markedly weaker than M1

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14
Q

What cortex has longest latency?

A

PMA/SMA

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15
Q

How much larger is PMA and SMA than M1?

A

6 times larger

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16
Q

What is the focus of the pre-motor cortex?

A

Set-related neuronal activity; movement planning

17
Q

What is the focus of the supplementary motor cortex?

A

Bimanual tasks

18
Q

What occurs when cortical damage occurs?

A

Loss of voluntary movements; weakness; paralysis

19
Q

What does the basal ganglia control?

A

Movement regulation; skill learning; habit formation; reward systems

20
Q

How do the pathways of the basal ganglia work together?

A

Both start at cortex; normally balanced

21
Q

What are the differences between the two pathways?

A

Direct has an excitatory effect on cortex, indirect has an inhibitory effect on cortex; direct is pro-movement, indirect is anti-movement

22
Q

What happens when someone suffers from hyperkinetic disorders?

A

Shifted towards direct pathway; unwanted movements initiated involuntarily; e.g. Huntington’s

23
Q

What happens when someone suffers from hypokinetic disorders?

A

Shifted towards indirect pathway; cannot initiate movement; e.g. Parkinson’s

24
Q

What is the ratio of input:output of cerebellum?

A

40:1

25
Q

What is the structure of the cerebellum?

A

Crystalline, simple, three layers, 5 kinds of cells

26
Q

What are the 5 kinds of cells in the cerebellum?

A
Inhibitory stellate
Basket
Purkinje
Golgi
Excitatory granule
27
Q

What are the inputs to the cerebellum?

A

Only has 2; one is inferior cerebellar peduncle

28
Q

What are the outputs of the cerebellum?

A

Mainly motor; superior cerebellar peduncle to motor cortex and red nuclei; inferior cerebellar peduncle to vestibular nuclei

29
Q

What are the motor deficits caused by cerebellum damage?

A

Delayed movement; range of movement errors (e.g. touching nose); patterned movement errors