Movement Disorder Tutorial Flashcards
What are the signs of an upper motor neurone lesion?
- Tone increased spastic
- Clonus present
- Power weakness
- Reflexes brisk
- Extensor plantar responses, no wasting and no fasciculations.
What is the power weakness distribution in UMNL?
pyramidal distribution flexors stronger than extensors UL and extensors stronger than flexors in LL
Why are reflexes exgggaertaed/brisk. in UMNL?
Inability to activate muscles, decrease level of inhibition that a arrive at ventral horn of motor neurone, so reflexes are exaggerated or brisk
What are the signs of an lower motor neurone lesion?
- Tone flaccid
- Power weakness
- no clonus
- reflexes reduced or absent
- flexor plantar response
- wasting may be present
- fasciculations may be present.
What is the power weakness distribution in LMNL?
distal weaker than proximal
Is it an isolated lesion if both UMN and LMN are affected?
NO
Which pathways are affected?
Pyramidal tracts (these are the corticospinal and corticobulbar tracts) providing voluntary motor commands to limbs/trunk and head/neck respectively
Why are abdominal reflexes (superficial reflexes) absent while the other reflexes (deep tendon reflexes) are brisk?
- This is the hallmark of a pure corticospinal tract lesio
- Stroking the skin of the abdomen causes the abdominal wall muscles to contract, sometimes pulling theumbilicustowards the stimulus
- These reflexcontractions are often absent inupper motor neurone disorders.
What is a fasciculation? What is its significance?
- A fasciculation is an involuntary and abnormal firing of a single motor neuron and all its innervated muscle fibres
- They are visible to the eye