Movement & Descending Tracts Flashcards
What is being tested during the stretch reflex?
Integrity of connections of neurones
Status of neurones of the reflex
Status of synapses of the reflex
Status of wider circuits built from stretch reflex
note: monosynaptic reflex (contraction of agonist muscle) is tested (the bisynaptic reflex which involves the relaxation of the antagonist muscle cannot be tested)
Contrast alpha and gamma-motoneurones.
Both LMNs
Gamma-motoneurones resistant to descending inhibition —> brief muscle contraction (muscle tone)
Alpha-motoneurones completely disabled by descending inhibition
What is the muscle stretch reflex? What are the different sub-types?
Muscle stretch reflex = stretch-activated reflex contraction of a skeletal muscle
- monosynaptic stretch reflex = direct connection of stretch receptor afferent neurone and lower motor neurone (one synapse)
- withdrawal reflex = move extremity away from noxious stimulus
- dampening and loading reflex = averages multiple nervous signals —> smooth muscle contraction
Contrast the functions of UMNs and LMNs.
UMNs:
- supply skeletal muscle indirectly (exert actions via LMNs)
- includes all descending tracts
- includes all interneurones
- UMN signs can vary
LMNs:
- supplies skeletal muscles directly
- only one type, therefore only one variety of motor deficiency arise from LMN damage
- somatic motor efferent with cell body in lamina IX of spinal cord (spinal motor nucleus) or cranial nerve motor nucleus
- evoke voluntary movements when commanded by UMNs
- evoke reflex movements when recruited by spinal motor circuits
What is a motor unit?
One alpha-motoneurone + variable no. of extrafusal muscle fibres it supplies
Minimal functional unit of the motor system
In which laminae are the motor neurones located?
Ventral horn
Laminae VIII & IX
What are template neural circuits? What are minimal neural circuits?
Template neural circuit = all motor circuits of the body are built from these; move connections added
Minimal neural circuit = underlies all movements of the body and sets all motor tone
Outline the sequence of the knee jerk reflex.
- Vibration as tendon changes length of muscle detected by muscle spindle (increased length due to relaxation of muscle)
- Sends sensory information to spinal cord
- Command to contract muscle (interneurone also sends commands to LMN of antagonist muscle to relax)
What is a reflex? What are the components of the reflex?
Reflex = involuntary, unlearned, repeatable, automatic reaction to a specific stimulus that does not require the brain to be intact
- receptor/transducer
- afferent fibre
- integration centre
- efferent fibre
- effector
note: not so much for preventing injury, but for allowing actions e.g. being able to hold a bowl whilst it is being filled
note: stretch reflex present in all muscles of the body
Contrast monosynaptic and polysynaptic stretch reflexes.
MONOSYNAPTIC: afferent —> efferent
e. g. stretch reflex
note: effectively monosynaptic (cannot test component inhibiting the antagonist muscle)
POLYSYNAPTIC: afferent —> interneurone —> efferent
e. g. antagonist muscle inhibition during stretch reflex
e. g. withdrawal reflex
e. g. crossed extensor reflex
Outline the sequence of events in the withdrawal reflex.
- Painful stimulus
- Primary sensory neurone diverges:
- Ascending pathway for sensation (pain) and postural adjustment (shift in centre of gravity)
- Withdrawal reflex pulls limb away from painful stimulus (flexor motoneurone)
- Crossed extensor reflex supports body as weight shifts away from painful stimulus
Contrast the muscle spindles and Golgi tendon organs.
Muscle spindle = receptor sensitive to stretch embedded between and parallel to fibres of striated muscles
Golgi tendon organ = receptor sensitive to stretch within tendons
Permanently connected to cell bodies of LMNs
Send information to:
- brain (via dorsal columns)
- cerebellum (via spinocerebellar tracts)
- spinal motoneurones
When is muscle tone inhibited?
Low in utero, suppressed in the newborn (allows birth)
Inhibited during REM sleep in all muscles EXCEPT:
- muscles of respiration
- extra-ocular muscles
- urinary sphincter
- anal sphincter
Give the spinal neural levels for the reflexes tested in the neurological exam.
Biceps = C5-C6 Supinator = C5-C6 Triceps = C7
Knee = L3-L4 Ankle = S1
Give some important spinal neural levels.
Diaphragm = C3-C5
Biceps = C5-C6
Wrist = C8-T1
Nipple = T4
Umbilicus = T10
Hip flexion = L1-L2
Quadriceps = L3-L4
Knee flexion = S1
Dorsiflexion = L5
Plantarflexion = S1-S2
Urinary &anal sphincter tone = S2-S4
Which part of the brain is responsible for movement? Differentiate the cortical and non-cortical descending tracts.
Pre-central gyrus of frontal cortex
Cortical descending tracts:
- cerebral cortex —> brainstem
- cerebellum —> brainstem
Non-cortical descending tracts:
- cerebral cortex —> basal ganglia & cerebellum —> thalamus —> cerebral cortex
Neurones of pre-frontal, supplementary motor cortex, and somatosensory cortex terminate on basal ganglia or cerebellum (selection and feedback of motor regions)
Neurones of pre-central gyrus terminate on cell bodies of alpha-motoneurones of muscles on the contralateral side
Describe the path of the corticobulbar tracts.
Terminate in cranial nerve motor nuclei
Primary motor area in cerebral cortex supply:
- > contralateral and ipsilateral trigeminal motor nuclei (muscles of mastication)
- > contralateral facial motor nucleus (muscles of facial expression)
- > contralateral and ipsilateral nuclei for vocalisation
- > contralateral and ipsilateral nuclei for swallowing
- > contralateral hypoglossal nucleus (muscles of tongue movements)
Cingulate motor area —> contralateral and ipsilateral facial motor nuclei (therefore muscles of brow have bilateral innervation)
Describe the path of the corticospinal tracts.
Terminate on cell bodies of spinal motor nuclei
Responsible for fractionation of finger movements on the contralateral side (not present in children as myelination has not occurred)
Divided in lateral and ventral corticospinal tracts:
LATERAL CORTICOSPINAL TRACT (75%-85%) = axons travel via internal capsule —> decussate in medulla (medullary pyramids) —> travel in lateral funiculus of spinal cord
VENTRAL CORTICOSPINAL TRACT (15%-25%) = axons travel via internal capsule —> join medullary pyramids —> decussate in spinal neural segment of target —> travel in ventral funiculus of spinal cord —> synapse directly with LMNs
What is a motoneurone?
Somatic efferent supplying skeletal muscles
- brings about displacement of limbs
- sets muscle tone (via background electrical impulses —> minimal contraction) —> maintain body posture and hold head upright
What are the bulbarspinal tracts? What are their general functions?
Synapse to interneurones of spinal reflex pathways of the spinal cord
Generally inhibit LMNs of reflex pathways
- rubrospinal tract
- reticulospinal tract
- tectospinal tract
- vestibulospinal tract