corticospinal tract and other motor pathways Flashcards
what are the arteries that perfuse the spinal cord
two posterior arteries, from vertebral artery and PICA
one anterior artery from the vertebral arteries
connected circumferentially by a spinal arterial plexus
what are the three main tracts of the nervous system
corticospinal tract - motor
spinothalamic/anterolateral - sensory (pain and temperature)
posterior column, medial lemniscus - sensory (vibration, proprioception, fine touch)
what is the name of the anatomical structure which returns blood from the spinal cord
batsons plexus, which is valveless and moves with increased intraabdominal pressure. it is also been implicated in prostatic cancer metastasis.
the descending motor tracts have two main pathways
lateral motor system
(includes the lateral corticospinal tract and the rubrospinal tract)
and directs movement of contralateral limbs
and
medial motor systems
anterior corticospinal tract, vestibulospinal tract, reticulospinal tracts, tectospinal tracts (involved in axial and girdle muscles, posture, head and neck position and balance)
the lateral corticospinal tract
begins at the primary motor cortex (precentral gyrus) and decussate and the medullary pyramids and travel down the length of the spinal cord to direct messages to lower motor neurons which direct muscle movement
the internal capsule
are white matter tracts, containing motor information from the primary motor cortex, and enter from the corona radiata to create the internal capsule
is best visualised in horizontal brain sections
the thalamus and caudate are always medial, where the putamen and the globus pallidus are always lateral
contains three parts, anterior limb, genu, and posterior limb
the lateral corticospinal tracts are located in which portion of the internal capsule
the posterior limb - face is most anterior, and the arm, trunk and leg are more posterior
the internal capsule enters the midbrain and forms what structure, is the somatotropy the same?
cerebral peduncles - basis pedunculi
face, arm, trunk, leg (medial to lateral)
upper motor neurons
motor cortex to anterior horn cell of the spinal cord
lower motor neurons
anterior horn cell to skeletal muscle
hyperreflexia, hypertonia, clonus, weakness of upper limb flexors and lower limb extensors and an upgoing babinski (extensor)
are signs of what
an upper motor neuron lesion
hyporeflexia, muscle atrophy, widespread muscular weakness, fasiculation, hyotonia, absent clonus
are indicative of a lower motor neuron lesion
downgoing or flexor Babinski response
a lower motor neuron lesion
describe multiple sclerosis
it is an autoimmune inflammatory disorder which attacks the oligodendroglial myelin and leads to demyelinating plaques
sclerotic glial scars appear throughout the CNS over time
it is twice as common in females and peak of onset is 20-40 years
classic definition is two or more deficits seperated in neuroanatomical space and time
typical clinical features: white matter lesions (periventricular lesions on T2 MRI - creating Dawsons fingers), slowed conduction velocities, presense of oligoclonal bands in CSF
50% will have had an episode of optic neuritis or transverse myelitis
the onset produces a relapsing remitting stage, but progresses to a refractory chronic progressive phase
acute treatment involves steriods, first line agents include beta-interferon, second line is monoclonal antibodies with cyclophosphamide and mitoxantrone
in addition to upper motor neuron symptoms, there is sensory loss, pain, cerebellar disturbances, cranial nerve problems, bowel/bladder dysfunction, and psychiatric symptoms
describe motor neuron disease
this is known as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis or Lou Gehrigs
it is accompanied by umn signs such as brisk reflexes and hypertonia, with lmn signs (fasiculations and atrophy) and there is no sensory loss
there is bulbar (medulla- mouth, pharynx and larynx) effects which spare the extraocular muscles and this includes dysarthria and dysphagia with uncontrollable bouts of laughter and crying
patients die from respiratory failure, and no cure available