Gait Flashcards
1
Q
Elements of Normal Gait
A
- Posture
- Arm swing
- Length of stride
- Base: distance btw 2 feet, usually 2-3 inches, aligned with shoulders
- Rhythm: smooth?
- Presence of associated movements
2
Q
Corticospinal tracts
A
- voluntary motor control
- mainly inhibitory*
*reticulspinal, vestibulospinal, and rubrospinal tracts give baseline level of activation
3
Q
“Extrapyramidal” basal ganglia
A
– subcortical motor systems (modulation of motor control)
- damage results in wriggling movements, extraneous truncal movements and facial tics
- e.g., Tourette’s Syndrome
4
Q
Cerebellar pathways
A
- balance & coordination
- Cerebellar influences are ipsilateral
- Cerebellar lesions rarely cause weakness (they cause ataxia)
- Cerebellar disease may be associated with hypotonia
5
Q
Sensory systems
A
- need fo feel the ground
6
Q
Vestibular system
A
- stabilizes us in external space as we move
7
Q
Prefrontal cortex & associative zones
A
- Executive function
- Associative zones (Brodmann Area 6) have pre-programmed motor movements
- Loss results in Apraxias
8
Q
Peripheral nerves
A
- connect intention to muscles
Muscle
9
Q
Cerebellar Inputs & Outputs
A
- Inferior cerebellar peduncle: input to cerebellum
- Middle cerebellar peduncle: allows for communcation between cerebellar hemispheres
- Superior cerebellar peduncle: cerebellar outflow to the cortex
Exception: anterior spinocerebellar tract enters cerebellum from spinal cord thru the superior cerebellar penduncle