Subcortical Motor Pathways Flashcards

1
Q

The corticospinal tract is known as the

A

pyramidal system

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2
Q

The subcortical motor system is often called the

A

extrapyramidal system

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3
Q

Subcortical motor system is presumed to be primitive and associated with…

A

quick, instinctive and crude movement (synergistic)

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4
Q

Subcortical motor system basics

A
  • Involuntary movement
  • “Start” in nucleus in the brainstem
  • Motor pathways synapse with and make sure of the same lower motor neuron pathways that are associated in the corticospinal tract
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5
Q

What are the three subcortical motor pathways?

A
  • Rubrospinal Tract
  • Reticulospinal Tract
  • Vestibulospinal Tract
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6
Q

Rubrospinal Tract

A
  • Begins in the Red Nucleus (Located in the brainstem; receives input from CB and motor cortex)
  • Tract descends in the spinal cord as the Rubrospinal Tract
  • Decussation occurs, unknown; therefore it has contralateral involvement (likely midbrain)
  • Decends next to the lateral Corticospinal Tract
  • Function: UE Flexor tone (and inhibition of extensors)
  • Mediate some function after damage to the pyramidal (CST) system; EX: Monkey
  • Major connections with CB; Involved with coordination with reach to grasp tasks (Arm and hand movements are coordinated seperately)
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7
Q

Reticulospinal Tract

A
  • Begins in Reticular Formation (Located in both pons and medulla)
  • Function: Facilitates (or inhibits) postural muscles accommodate postural shifts
  • Axons from the reticular formation descend through spinal cord as the Reticulospinal Tract (lateral and medial tracts) near the CST.
  • Axons synapse on interneurons in the cord bilaterally., crossing location has not been established.
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8
Q

Reticular Formation

A
  • Loose network of cells that are located in both pons and medulla
  • Has many inputs
  • Besides motor function, involved in arousal and activity level of the central nervous system (Vestibular system involved here because position changes the arousal level)
  • Major production areas for neuro chemicals
  • Small area, wide-spread impacts
  • Involved with horizontal gaze coordination
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9
Q

Vestibulospinal Tracts

A
  • Begins at the Vestibular Nucleus (located at the pontomedullary junction)
  • Function: Regulate and maintain balance and postural orientations (input from vestibular and CB)
  • From Vestibular Nucleus goes into three pathways
    Medial Vestibulospinal Tract (Modifies head position; bilateral innervation)
    Lateral Vestibulospinal Tract (Modies postual response; axial/thoracic muscles; unilateral innervation)
    Extra Ocular Vestibular Pathway (Allows eyes to remain fixed on target when the head moves)
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10
Q

Extra Ocular Vestibular Pathway

A
  • Travels from Vestibular Nucleus to the Abducens Nucleus (Lateral Rectus)
  • From Abducens Nucleus to Oculomotor Nucleus (Medial Rectus)
  • Unilateral innervation
  • Abnormalities: Damage to one nucleus, leads to eyes overshooting; Nystagmus
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11
Q

Hierarchy of Subcortical Motor Systems

A
  1. Corticospinal System
  2. Rubrospinal System
  3. Reticulospinal System
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12
Q

When Rubrospinal System becomes the primary motor system, what will the patient present with?

A
  • Reflexive flexion of the upper limbs accompanied by extension of the lower limbs
  • Decorticate Posture
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13
Q

When Reticulospinal System becomes the primary motor system, what will the patient present with?

A
  • Reflexive extension of the Upper and Lower limbs
  • Decerebrate Posture
  • Patients don’t often survive this as it means damage above the medulla
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14
Q

If you observe nystamus with a patient, what pathways could be damaged?

A

Multiple options. Just know something is wrong!

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