Week 6 LIs Flashcards

1
Q

Feedforward

A

postural adjustments for voluntary movement take place in anticipation of movement

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2
Q

feedback

A

postural adjustments for voluntary movement that take place in response to postural instability that results from moveemnt

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3
Q

feed forward mechanism involves

A

(cortico)reticulospinal pathway

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4
Q

feedback mechanisms rely on

A
  • proprioceptive, vestibular, and visual afferents are mediated in large part through local spinal reflexe, the vestibulospinal pathways, and erebellum
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5
Q

activity in various motor pathways coordinated

A
  1. Decision made to move
  2. UMNs in motor cortex project motor command
  3. Movement of limb may produce unanticipated postural instability
  4. Posture corrected
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6
Q

decision made to move

A

motor plan is constructed in cerebral cortical and subcortical networks including

  • limbic structures
  • association areas of neocortex
  • basal ganglia
  • motor command ultimately carried by UMNs in motor cortex
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7
Q

UMNS in motor cortex project the motor command to

A
  1. motor neuron pools involved in directed limb movement (Lateral Motor pathways; corticospinal, (cortico)rubrospinal
  2. motor neuron pools involved in anticipatory postural adjustments (medial motor pathways; (cortico)Reticulospinal)
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8
Q

Motor neuron pools involved in directed limb movements

A
  • projections to LMNs may be direct via coritcospinal tract
  • more often cortical UMNs synapse on UMNs in red nucleus and reticular formation which then project to LMNs in spinal cord to control directed limb movements or protraction of limb for locomotion
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9
Q

motor neuron pools involved in anticipatory posutural adjustments

A
  • cortical UMNs project on Reticulospinal UMNs which project to LMNs controlling postural muscles; contraction in postural muscles precedes contraction of muscles involved in desired movement
  • coticospinal UMNs may also project directly to spinal cord to control postural LMNs
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10
Q

reticulospinal UMNs also recieve input from

A

vestibular system and spinal cord, can use this information to construct a motor plan anticipating necessary postural adjustments

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11
Q

movement of limb produces unanticipated postural instablity

A

which is detected by proprioceptors, the vestibular system, and/ or the visual system

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12
Q

rapid feedback correction of posture achieved largely via

A
  • local reflexes
  • vestibulospinal pathways
  • cerebeullum
  • these all receive various aspects of sensory feedback
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13
Q

decerebrate rigidity caused by severe lesions of

A

brainstem in midbrain and/ or pons (usually midbrain)

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14
Q

animals with decerebrate rigidity demonstrate

A
  • excessive extensor tone in all 4 limbs
  • opisthotonus
  • severely altered state of consciousness
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15
Q

opisthotonus

A

hyperextension of neck and back

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16
Q

profoundly altered consciousness w/ decerebrate rigidity

A

b/c major population of ascending reticular activating system in midbrain

17
Q

lesions of cd midbrain with decerebrate rigidity

A

most dramatic effect bc essentially removes all motor cortex and red nucleus UMN influence w/ in motor system

18
Q

what do UMNs knocked out in decerebrate rigidity normally do

A
  • facilitate flexors
  • inhibit extensors
    so if these are knocked out then nothing is facilitating flexors nor inhibiting extensors so you end up with excessive extensor tone
19
Q

Cerebral cortex facilitates UMNs of

A

medullary reticular formation so lesion in midbrain/ pons -> these UMNs being significantly less active

20
Q

impact of cortical input removal on vestibulospinal and pontine reticulospinal UMNs

A

minimal impact bc these receive excitatory input from vestibular apparatus and spinal cord, do not require cortical input to be active
- will continue to facilitate extensor muscles with little to no counter regulation from corticospinal, rubrospinal, and medullary reticulospinal pathways
aka excitatory input remains for extensors but nothing facilitating flexors -> decerebrate rigidity bc all the other pathways are knocked out