Movement Disorders Flashcards
what are the two models of motor dysfunction in basal ganglia?
Rate models: amount of movement and kinematic parameters are determined by the firing RATES of neurons in basal ganglia, thalamus, cortex
Oscillation models: oscillatory changes in BG- thalamocortical circuits contribute to changes in motor activity (firing PATTERN)
what are the four characteristic of Parkinson’s disease?
tremor at rest
Akinesia (freezing in front of edges, decreased arm swing etc)
Bradykinesia (slowing of activies of daily living)
Rigidity
what is the biochemical principle of Parkinson’s disease? What is it/is it not correlated with?
Dopamine depletion in SNc
dopamine loss results in changes in neuronal firing rates and firing pattern in the basal ganglia
Loss of dopamine is correlated with parkinsonism (tremor, akinesia, rigidity) but not with other issues (dementia, balance problems etc)
describe rate model for Parkinson’s
striatal dopamine depletion > increased basal ganglia output > inhibition of thalamic and cortical activity > akinesia/bradykinesia
pathway (optional):
SNc no longer acts on striatum (excite D1, inhibit D2) > Indirect pathway increased, direct pathway inhibited > GPe inhibited > STN excited > GPi/SNr excited > Thalamus inhibited > cortex inhibited > mvt inhibited
describe oscillatory model of Parkinson’s
increased beta-gamma phase-amplitude coupling in M1 LFPs in Parkinson’s Disease (the activity of beta depends on the phase of gamma oscillation)
optional:
In normal patient, beta band is desynchronized before movement and synchronized after movement; gamma band is synchronized before movement and desynchronized after movement
In Parkinson patients, this is flipped.
This may result in akinesia (freezing, decreased arm swing)
cause of drug-induced dyskinesias
replace dopamine loss with too much D2 activation, GPi less inhibitive, disinhibit the thalamus
describe picture of hemiballismus
often due to lesion of STN
Indirect pathway no longer active
less direct pathway inhibits GPi/SNr > GPi/SNr don’t inhibit thalamus as much > thalamus activity increased > cortex activity increased > movements increased
describe pathology of Huntington’s disease
trinucleotide repeat disease
early: loss of indirect pathway neurons in striatum (genetic)
late: extensive cortical atrophy
describe picture of Huntington’s (not in lecture)
Indirect pathway deteriorates
GPe strongly inhibits STN (and GPi/SNr) > STN no longer excites GPi/SNr
Thalamus no longer inhibited by GPi/SNr > more movement
describe clinical manifestation of Huntington’s
First, chora (hyperkinetic), then parkinsonism (hypokinetic)
what is the current prominent treatment of Huntington-induced chorea
Make patient slightly parkinsonian (Dopa receptor blockers) to stop movements, induce hypokinesia
what are clinical features of dystonia?
Slow, sustained involuntary muscle contractions, abnormal poses (writer’s cramp)
what is the pathway of dystonia?
Low levels of cortical inhibition
Abnormal mapping in sensory/motor cortices
Dopaminergic dysfunction
characteristic of movement disorders
- presence of abnormal or excessive movements
- no impairment of consciousness
- no weakness
classification schemes
- hyperkinetic vs hypokinetic
- primary vs secondary
- focal vs generalized