Class 13 Flashcards
Cerebellar damage
Cerebellar ataxia
• Difficulty of coordinating movements (ex. coordinate muscles)
• Dysarthria (symptom)
Affects recalibration of movement after visual distortion
Eyeblink conditioning
Dysarthria
cerebellar ataxia of speech output
Test of cerebellar damage
Nose test
(touch nose, touch other finger, and back, looking for patterns of activity, and how muscles of arm are working together vs should work)
in cerebellar ataxia - can be overshoot
Action tremor
tremors occurring during performance of action
tend to overshoot the movement of the hand`
Eyeblink conditioning
when making a blinking response to something being blown in eye - normally eyes close - if tone before than close eyes before air puff happen
timing of a conditioned response
Parkinson’s Disease
- Dopamine deficiency: Damage to substantia nigra (projects to striatum )
- Overactivity of indirect pathway as a result of lack of inputs to the striatum
Positive symptoms of PD
- Tremors - there because other systems are trying to compinase for high level of indirecct pathway of inhibiton
- Rigidity - high actvaton of indirect pathway - blocks movemtn
Negative symptoms of PD
- Akinesia/bradykinesia
* Disturbance in posture
Huntington’s Disease
• Selective loss of projections from striatum to GPe
• Damages indirect route
- hereditary neurodegenerative disorder (autosomal Dominate)
Chorea
Dystonia
Chorea
rapid, jerky, involuntary sequences of movements
Dystonia
abnormal posturing due to involuntary muscle contractions
Apraxia
Apraxia typically results from lesions of left parietal or frontal lesions, but can result from lesions to multiple areas
• Inability to do skilled, sequential, purposeful movement
Low-level motor processes intact
• Bilateral deficit instead of just contralateral to damage
Thought to be due to damage to the ventrodorsal stream
Callosal apraxia
- Disconnection syndrome
- Inability to follow verbal command with left hand
- Corpus callosum severed, so right motor cortex cannot receive commands
Can ipsilateral cortex take over for contralateral loss?
potently in PFC
Akinesia/bradykinesia
slowness of movements
trouble walking steadily, write, etc.
cueing can help with movement (lines on floor, sound beep, etc) along with medication