Diseases of Motor Units Flashcards
Focal vs diffuse and acute vs chronic lesions for motor systems
OUTLINE don’t memorise
Acute Chronic
Focal Trauma/Vascular Brain tumour
Diffuse Toxin/Injection Degeneration
Motoneuron locations
Motoneuron is a LMN
Brainstem and spinal cord
Types of motoneurons
Alpha-extrafual
Gamma- intrafusal/ msucle spindles
Inputs to motoneurons (alpha)
Corticospinal; rubro-spinal; reticulo spinal; vestibulo-spinal; 1a afferent
Muscular Dystrophy, what is it and what does it cause
Childen vs adults
Inherited group of disorders that present due to a lack of muscle proteins.
Results in Muscle wasting and weakness.
Most common in children is DMD, dystrophin defect.
Most common in adults is myotonic MD, also show myotonia (delay of muscle to relax after contraction). Myotonin defect (expansion of CTG)
Myasthenia Gravis
test?
Autoimmune, fewer ACh receptors, less EPP, less transmission.
Muscle weakness
Test: edrophonium blocks ACh esterase or test for antibodies in serum
Botulism
A form of food poisoning, from clostridium botulinum.
Toxins are internalised and break down proteins involved in NT release, so less ACh released. Affects striated and smooth muscle
Axotomy causes
Disc protrusion or plexus lesion
Causes distal Wallerian Degeneration
Proximal chromatolysis
Axon regenerates through debris
Wallerian Degeneration
note can occur in CNS but no regeneration
- Loss of synaptic transmission
- Degeneration due to lack of axon survival factor NMNAT2
- Schwann cells can survive for axon regeneration and re-innervation