1 Motor Systems Weyand Narrative Flashcards
What does feedback tell us?
whether what we wanted to do was actually done
What does threshold do?
facilitate to do or not to do an act
What part of the brain does feedback and corrections run through?
cerebellum
Thresholding and behavior selection occurs where?
basal ganglia
what does alpha motor neuron innervate?
extrafusal fibers
what does gamma motor neuron innervate
intrafusal fibers of the muscle spindle organ
where are lower motor neurons located?
Rexed’s Lamina IX (ventral horn of spinal cord) + motor nuclei of cranial nerves
What is the neurotransmitter of LMNs? What receptor do they bind to?
Acetylcholine; Nicotinic Cholinergic Receptors (nAch)
What is Polio? What does it do?
Polio is a virus that attacks LMNs
What is Amyotropic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS)? What does it do?
ALS attacks and wastes both upper and lower motor neurons. Sometimes only LMNs.
What are the 3 types of muscle fibers?
slow twitch (least force, high endurance; lots of mitochondria), fast twitch fatigue resistant (fewer mitochondria), fast twitch fatigueable (twice as powerful, little stamina)
How do muscles increase power?
increase frequency of output & if not enough, increase number of motor units (recruitment)
What is the size principle? How does it apply?
LMNs doing the most work have small cell bodies & innervate slow-twitch fibers. When there is a demand, they increase frequency of action potentials. If help is needed, they recruit in order from small cell bodies to large cell bodies (slow twitch fibers, fast twitch fatigue-resistant fibers, and lastly fast-twitch fatiguable fibers - which have the largest cell bodies and power)
What are the components of the myotactic reflex? How does it work?
Sensory (Ia fibers attached to muscle spindle receptor) & Motor (alpha motor neuron). Stretch of the muscle (via tapping tendon) also stretching muscle spindle organ, which sets off Ia fiber to produce several action potentials. “contract! contract! you’re being stretched!” to the alpha motor neuron wired to the stretched muscle. Ia fibers also has a collateral that makes synaptic contact with an inhibitory interneuron (Ia inhibitory interneuron) that inhibits the alpha motor neuron going to the antagonistic muscle. (called Reciprocal Inhibition). Ia fibers, thirdly, send a ‘cc’ of what’s going on to the brain via ascending lemniscal fibers & ascending spinocerebellar fibers, which finds its way back up to the motor cortex.
What does the Spinocerebellar Tract convey?
proprioception via muscle spindle fibers & Golgi tendon organs. cell bodies in DRG, synapse in lamina VII (Dorsal Nucleus of Clark)