the pyramidal system Flashcards
1
Q
characteristics of pyramidal lesions
A
- Pyramidal drift of an upper limb 2. Weakness with characteristic distribution 3. Increase in tone and spasticity 4. hyperreflexia 5. extensor plantar response 6. no muscle wasting
2
Q
lesion prior to the decussation at the pyramids
A
- contralateral hemiplegia
3
Q
lesion just beyond the decussation at the pyramids prior to spinal chord entry
A
- Quadriplegia
4
Q
Pyramidal drift of the upper limb
A
- an upper motor neurone sign 2. Eyes closed + both arms held out with palms facing up 3. affected limb drifts downwards and pronates
5
Q
weakness and loss of skilled movement
A
- unilateral pyramidal lesion above the decussation in the medulla causes weakness of opposite limbs 2. Upper limb - flexors remain stronger than extensors 3. Lower limb - extensors remain stronger than flexors 4. no wasting
6
Q
Increase in tone + spasticity
A
- increase in tone due to loss of inhibitory effects of the corticospinal tract and increase in spinal reflex activity 2. increase in tone/spasticity - characterised by sudden change in resistance to rapid passive movements 3. tendon reflexes become exaggerated due to increased tone
7
Q
patterns of upper motor neurone disorders
A
- Hemiparesis - weakness of limbs on one side 2. Paraparesis - weakness of both lower limbs 3. Tetraparesis/quadriparesis - weakness of four limbs
8
Q
Spastic paraparesis causes
A
Paraparesis indicates bilateral damage to corticospinal pathways causing weakness and spasticity
9
Q
Hemiparesis causes
A
- Motor cortex - weakness or loss of skilled movements confined to contralateral limb 2. Internal capsule 3. Pontine lesion - adjacent structures VIth/VIIth nuclei are involved - diplopia + facial weakness tends to occur 4. Spinal chord - isolated lesion of one lateral corticospinal tract causes ipsilateral UMN lesion
10
Q
Hemiparesis causes ( lesions in which locations?)
A
- Motor cortex - weakness or loss of skilled movements confined to contralateral limb 2. Internal capsule 3. Pontine lesion - adjacent structures VIth/VIIth nuclei are involved - diplopia + facial weakness tends to occur 4. Spinal chord - isolated lesion of one lateral corticospinal tract causes ipsilateral UMN lesion
11
Q
describe the corticospinal tract pathway
A