Motor control Flashcards
How is the motor system arranged?
Heirarchically
What is the highest level of the motor system hierarchy?
Primary motor cortex
What is the middle level of the motor system hierarchy?
Brain stem
What is the lowest level of the motor system hierarchy?
Spinal cord
How does the primary motor cortex directly interact with the spinal cord?
Projection via the CORTICOSPINAL tract
Other than project to the spinal cord, what else does the PMC do?
Regulates motor tracts that originate in the brainstem
What is the brainstem important in?
Goal directed movements of the hand/arm
How does the brainstem control distal limbs?
Via the lateral descending system
What neuronal pathway comes from the spinal cord?
What does this control?
Direct pathway to the muscles, via a neuronal circuit
Controls SIMPLE reflexes, such as walking/chewing
What are the simplest reflexes?
MONOSYNAPTIC:
- Sensory neuron
- Motor neuron
What is the structure of most of the reflexes in the body?
POLYSYNAPTIC:
- Sensory neuron
- Interneuron
- Motorneuron
What happens if you artificially stimulate the motor cortex, brain stem or spinal cord?
NO complex movements (only twitches)
What does the brain stem do?
Feeds information into the primary motor cortex
Where do the basal ganglia and cerebellum receive input from?
Where do they relay this information to?
Many areas of the cortex, from ALL different sensory modalities
Relay this info to the motor cortex via the THALAMUS
What is the function of the basal ganglia and the cerebellum?
Monitor commands from the PMC to ensure they are appropriate
What are the basal ganglia and cerebellum ‘aware’ of?
The situation that the person is in (orientation of the limbs etc.)
What happens when the body orientation changes?
Signals from the PMC are no longer appropriate
Basal ganglia/cerebellum send error correction signals to the PMC for approval
Error correction signal from the PMC to the muscles
What is the difference between the basal ganglia and the cerebellum when sending error correction signals?
Basal ganglia can ONLY feedback to the PMC to SUGGEST changes
Cerebellum also does this but can also BYPASS the PMC and send signals straight to the muscles if it needs to (via the brainstem and spinal cord)
How does the basal ganglia feedback to the PMC?
Via a subcortical loop
Why does the motor cortex need input from the basal ganglia and cerebellum?
To produce coordinated responses
What does electrical stimulation of the frontal lobe cause?
Movements on the OPPOSITE side of the body
What is Brodmann’s area 4?
Where is it located?
The primary motor cortex
Located just before the central sulcus
What is the primary motor cortex sometimes called?
The precentral gyrus
How was the position primary motor cortex discovered?
By electrical stimulation:
Lowest intensity stimulation here elicited movement
How were motor maps produced?
Anatomical and clinical observations of lesions
What did the motor maps produced show?
- Orderly arrangement along the gyrus (fingers close to hands, close to arms etc.)
- Fingers, hand and face to have DISPROPORTIONATELY large representation
Why is there a disproportionately large area for fingers, hand and face in the precentral gyrus?
Need fine movements of these parts of the body - requires large brain control
What do lesions in a specific area of the cortex cause?
Degeneration in the associated spinal cord area and neuron tracts (Wallerian degeneration)