Motor Systems Flashcards

1
Q

Contrast or compare an S-unit, FR-unit and FF-unit and the 3 types of fibers.

A

S unit- small MN, type I muscle fiber, red fibbers, ++++ mitchondria, ++++ capillaries

FR unit- type IIa fibers, white fibers, +++ mitochondria, +++ capillaries

FF-unit- Large MN, type IIb fibers, white fibers, ++ mitochondria, ++ capillaries

Type I (red fibers, slow twitch, small force, resistant fatigue)
Type IIa (white fibers, fast twitch, moderate force, resistant fatigue)
Type IIb (white fibers, fast twitch, large force, fatigable)
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2
Q

Define motor unit.

A

all the muscle fibers innervated by a LMN (motor neurons of brainstem and spinal cord)

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3
Q

Define size principle.

A

LMNs are recruited in order of size and force

S units — (add)— FR units —- (add) — FF units

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4
Q

Define upper motor neuron.

A

corticospinal and corticobulbar neurons

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5
Q

Describe the organization of LMNs into “groups”

A

Arranged into columns:

Medially placed- axial (trunk) muscles
Laterally placed -distal limb mubscles
Dorsally placed- flexor muscles
Ventrally placed- extensor muscles

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6
Q

Describe the components/functions of the 4-major “control systems” of the spinal cord LMNs

A

Reflex and pattern generators in the spinal cord

Descending pathways:

  • Corticospinal tract (lateral) – all excitatory (glutamate is the transmitter)
  • Vestibulospinal tract – postural adjustments/head movements
  • Reticulospinal tract – locomotion and postural control
  • Tectospinal tract – reflex turning of head to visual/auditory stimuli
  • (Rubrospinal tract) – significance in humans?

Cortical centers:

  • Association cortex – “decide” that a movement is needed
  • Supplementary motor area – planning/learning complex movements
  • Premotor cortex – devise a “plan” for the movement
  • Motor cortex – origin of “commands” to motor neurons

Basal ganglia and cerebellum – selection/adjusting movements

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7
Q

Describe the Lateral CST (the origins of its components, location within the internal capsule, and terminations

A

CST – multiple origins and terminations

CST has ~ 1 million fibers
-Primary motor cortex – only 50% of CST
(Betz cells – concentrated here, but only 3% of CST)
-Adjacent Frontal motor and Parietal areas contribute the rest of the CST fibers
(Sensorimotor cortex – both sides of the central sulcus)

CST projects to:

  • spinal cord and brainstem
  • collaterals (direct and indirect) to basal ganglia, thalamus, reticular formation, sensory nuclei

CST passes through posterior limb of internal capsule

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8
Q

Describe the corticobulbar tract (its locations within the internal capsule, pattern of terminations and CN motor nuclei it does and doesn’t innervate)

A

Descend anterior to corticospinal tract

Corticobulbar (corticonuclear) tract

  • Motor neurons of cranial nerves
  • Sensory relay nuclei
  • Reticular formation

May end on motor neurons, most end on interneurons of the reticular formation

Oculomotor, trochlear and abducens nuclei receive no direct corticobulbar innervation (test question!)

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