basal ganglia and cerebellum Flashcards
Parkinson's disease: recall the pathophysiology and clinical signs of Parkinson's disease
what does primary neuropathology of Parkinson’s disease include
neurodegeneration of dopaminergic neurones that originate in substantia nigra and project to striatum
locus classicus of Parkinson’s disease
substantia nigra (dopaminergic cells containing neuromelanin) lost
nigro-striatal pathway
nigrostriatal fibres from substantia nigra up to striatum
5 main motor signs of Parkinson’s disease
bradykinesia, hypomimic face, akinesia, rigidity, tremor at rest
what is bradykinesia
slowness of (small) movements e.g. doing up buttons, handling a knife
what is hypomimic face
expressionless, mask-like (absence of movements that normally animate the face)
what is akinesia
difficulty in initiation of movements because cannot initiate movements internally
why is rigidity a sign
muscle tone increases, causing resistance to externally imposed joint movements
features of tremors at rest and spread
4-7 Hz, starts in one hand (“pill-rolling tremor” - rotation around wrist); with time spreads to other parts of the body (unilateral to bilateral; distal to proximal)
Parkinson’s disease effect on vertebral column
kyphosis
Parkinson’s disease and cognitive decline
Parkinson’s disease spreads through brain over time, causing cognitive decline