Motor Problems Flashcards

1
Q

Upper motor neurons:

The cell bodies are found in the cortex:

  • Most are in the motor cortex (pre-central gyrus). What type of cells are there?
  • The rest are in the brain stem. What are these neurons referred to as?

How is the information carried to the LMN?

Where do UMN lesions become LMN lesions?

What is UMN sometimes referred to as?

A

Pyramidal cells in the motor cortex

Extrapyramidal neurons

Pyramidal (corticospinal and corticobulbar) and extrapyramidal tracts - so both the pre-motor cortex and the brain stem produce tracts

Anterior (ventral) horn cells - LOOK AT PICS OF SPINAL CORD

Pyramidal lesions = UMN lesions

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2
Q

Upper motor neurons:

Corticospinal tract:

> Where do 90% of these tracts lie, laterally or medially?

> Where do they decussate?

> Function

Would you get a contralateral/ipsilateral deficit if there is a:

  • Cortical lesion
  • Spinal cord lesion

Where do the anterior corticospinal tracts decussate?

What is its function?

A

Lateral

Medulla

Fine muscle movement, mainly of the limbs

Contralateral deficits - crosses over in medulla

Ipsilateral deficits - already crossed over in medulla

Where it exits the spinal cord

The trunk muscles and posture

So corticospinal tracts > medulla
Anterior corticospinal tract > level of exit at spinal cord

https://teachmeanatomy.info/neuroanatomy/pathways/descending-tracts-motor/

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3
Q

Lower motor neurons:

Where are the cell bodies?

What is classed as LMN lesion?

A

Anterior horn of the spinal cord or the motor nuclei of the cranial nerves

Anterior horn cells and below 
Ventral nerve root 
Peripheral nerves 
NMJ
The muscle
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4
Q

UMN lesions:

Early UMN lesions (e.g. stroke, SAH) are similar to LMN lesions in their presentation. What 2 things present?

When the lesion is more established, what sort of signs do you see?:

  • Does anything happen to the muscle bulk?
  • Power
  • Reflexes - what happens to reflexes, what special reflexes might you see? - 2
  • Tone
  • Do you get fasciculations?
A

Reduced tone - floppy
Reduced reflexes - hyporeflexia

Normal bulk
Reduced power
Hypereflexia (Babinski and clonus)
Hypertonia

No fasciculations - that only happens in LMN as the direct nerve on the muscle is affected

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5
Q

UMN lesions:

Pyramidal lesions - why do you get a flexed arms and leg extension?
What else do you get with this?

Extrapyramidal lesions - you get rigidity. How does this differ from spasticity?

A

Arm extensors weak - flexed arm
Leg flexors are weak - leg extension

BASICALLY THE BACK OF EVERYTHING IN LIMBS ARE WEAK

Spasticity - velocity-dependent hypertonia - you get a catch due to sudden increase in tone.

Rigidity differs from spasticity in that the increased tone remains constant throughout the range of movement of the joint - non-velocity dependent.

SO WITH EXTRAPYRAMIDAL - you get normal UMN signs - RIGIDITY

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6
Q

UMN lesions:

Presentation by location:

Are cortical lesions contra/ipsilateral?

Lesions in the medulla:

  • Contra/ipsi
  • UMN/LMN sym

Do lesions od cranial nerves cause:

  • LMN or UMN sym
  • Contra/ipsi
A

Contralateral sym

Medulla:
Contralateral and UMN

CN:
Ipsi
LMN

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7
Q

UMN lesions:

Presentation by location:

Spinal cord lesions (myelopathy):

  • UMN/LMN symptoms below the level of the lesion?
  • Are symptoms usually bi/unilateral?
  • What may happen the limbs?
  • What may you get LMN symptoms at the level of the lesion?
  • Causes - list some
A

UMN symptoms below the level of the lesion

Bilateral

Paraplegia (legs only)
Quadriplegia (all limbs)

Due to LMN cell body or root damage ( Basically anterior horn)

Spinal cord compression
Transverse myelitis 
MS
Spinal artery thrombosis 
Cord vasculitis 
B12 deficiency 
Syphilis
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8
Q

LMN lesions:

When the lesion is more established, what sort of signs do you see?:

  • Does anything happen to the muscle bulk?
  • Power
  • Reflexes
  • Tone
  • Do you get fasciculations?
A

Reduced bulk - muscle wasting
Reduced power
Reduced reflexes
Reduced tone

You get fasciculations

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9
Q

LMN lesions:

What is radiculopathy?

What are the main symptoms you get?

A

Referred to as pinched nerve, refers to a set of conditions in which one or more nerves are affected and do not work properly (a neuropathy).

This can result in pain (radicular pain), weakness, numbness, or difficulty controlling specific muscles.

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10
Q

LMN lesions:

What is neuropathy?

What are the main symptoms you get?

What symptoms do you get with NMJ problems?

What symptoms do you get with myopathy?

A

Peripheral nerves are damaged or diseased.

Weak 
Hyporeflexia 
----
Weakness and normal reflexes - MG
Weak or reduced reflexes that improve with repetition - Lambert-Eaton
----
Dystrophy due to wasting 
Reduced tone 
Myotonia - slow relaxation after contraction
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11
Q

What conditions would give a mixture of Upper and Lower motor neurone lesions?

A

MND
Disc degeneration which compresses the cord and a root
Spinal cord lesions in which there is anterior horn cell and/or root damage
Conus medullaris syndrome
Vit B12 deficiency

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12
Q

Proximal weakness:

What is it?

What is distal weakness?

What is global weakness?

A

The weakness of the hips and shoulders.

The weakness of the distal limbs - elbow, fingers, calves

Proximal + distal weakness

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13
Q

Proximal weakness:

S+S:

If you have weak hips, what might be difficult to do?
If you have weak shoulders, what might be difficult to do?

A

Hard getting upstairs, from chairs, up hills

Hard reaching up to shelves
Washing hair is hard

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14
Q

Mononeuropathy:

What is it? - look at name

What causes it?

What is mononeuritis multiplex?

Prognosis of mononeuropathy

A

Damage to a single peripheral nerve

Trauma
Compression
Stretching of the nerve

Multiple, non-contiguous nerves are affected

Most recover but some may need surgical decompression

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15
Q

Polyneuropathy:

What is it?

Causes of sensory polyneuropathies:

  • Endocrine condition
  • Lifestyle - 1
  • Vitamin deficiency - 2
  • Kidney issue

Causes of motor polyneuropathies:

  • Autoimmune - G
  • A type of poisoning
A

Damage to many peripheral nerves

DM
Alcohol
B12 and folate deficiency
CKD

Guillain-Barre syndrome

Lead poisoning

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16
Q

Polyneuropathy:

Presentation:

Motor - assym/sym, proximal/distal?

Sensory - how is the numbness, pins and needles. and/or burning described in medicine?

What would symptoms all the way to the torso suggest?

Bladder and bowels aren’t usually involved, so if they are, what should that point you to?

A

Symmetrical distal weakness - dropping things/falling
- Flexors and extensors affected equally

Glove or stocking distribution

Spinal cord lesion rather than poly

CNS lesion - brain, spinal cord or cauda equina

17
Q

Autonomic neuropathy:

Causes:

  • Endocrine condition
  • Autoimmune - 2
  • Long term virus

S+S - think autonomic

A

DM
Guillain-Barre syndrome and SLE
HIV

Urinary incontinence or retention
Altered HR nad orthostatic hypotension
GI disturbances