Spinal Tracts Flashcards
Describe the passage of motor neuron fibres (Upper & Lower)
Upper Motor Neurons originate in the cerebral cortex & brainstem
Then then synapse in the spinal cord or cranial nerve nuclei
From there Lower Motor Neuron’s travel to the muscles they innervate
Whats are corticobulbar vs corticospinal tracts?
Tracts of white matter, spefically UMNs.
Corticobulbar fibres terminate in the brainstem, in cranial nerve nuclei.
Corticospinal fibres terminate in the spinal cord
Most motor fibres descend by the corticospinal tract, describe its passage:
- > UMN starts in Primary Motor Cortex
- > Passes through the posterior limb of the internal capsule
-> Passes through cerebral peduncle to the brainstem
(Here corticobulbar fibres split off and synapse in contralateral cranial nerve nuclei)
-> Most corticospinal fibres decussate in the pyramids and enter the lateral corticospinal tract
(Some stay on the same side travelling as the anterior corticospinal tract)
-> When they get to the level they supply the fibres synapse in the grey matter of the spinal cord and exit through the ventral horn as spinal nerves
What do fibres of the corticospinal tract do?
They are involved in voluntary (So skeletal) skilled movements
How do Upper & Lower motor neurons affect reflexes?
Reflexes occur through LMNs and are dampened by UMN.
Hence an UMN lesion would lead to hyperreflexia and increased tone
Whats different about the set up of ascending spinal tracts (i.e. sensory) vs descending?
Sensory tracts have 3 neurons rather than 2, called:
- 1st order neurons
- 2nd order neurons
- 3rd order neurons
There are two main sensory tracts, what are they and what do they do?
- Posterior/dorsal Column
Rsponsible for fine touch, tactile localisation, vibration and proprioception - Lateral Spinothalamic Tract
Responsible for pain & Temp
Whats the structural difference between the posterior/dorsal column and the lateral spinothalamic tract?
- Both have 3 neurons
- Both 3rd order neurons connect a nucleus in the thalamus to the Post Central Gyrus of the parietal lobe.
- In both the 2nd order neuron does the crossing over
However, in the dorsal column the 1st order neuron travels up the dorsal column and synapses in the medulla
Whereas, in the lateral spinothalamic tract they synapse in the grey matter at the level they enter.
Define a reflex?
An involuntary stereotyped pattern of response brought about by a sensory stimulus
List & locate the important spinal tracts (Sensory & motor)
Pyramidal Tracts
- Corticospinal (lateral & anterior) - Found in Lateral White Matter
Extrapyramidal Tracts: (mainly anteromedial white matter)
- Rubrospinal (Starts in red nucleus of midbrain, involved in posture, only extrapyramidal tract in the lateral white matter)
- RecticuloSpinal (Split into pontine & medullary origins, handle reflexive control of posture & balance using trunk & anti-gravity limb muscles)
- Vestibulospinal (Handles posture & balance)
Sensory:
- Dorsal Column (Carries most sensory info) - In posterolateral white matter
- Spinothalamic (Anterior & Lateral) Carries nociception & temp from contralateral body - In anteromedial white matter
Also remember tectospinal which Maintains eye stability as the body moves, Originating in the Superior Coliculus