Exam 4: L1 Flashcards

1
Q

Motor Systems:

What are the three levels of motor control?

The cortex can influence the spinal cord ____ or through the ____

All levels receive _____ and are modified by __ and ___

A

Motor Systems:

The three levels of motor control are:

  • forebrain
  • brainstem
  • spinal cord

The cortex can influence the spinal cord directly or through the descending systems of the brainstem

All levels receive sensory inputs and are modified by basal ganglia and cerebellar activity

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
2
Q

The Motor Hierarchy (draw it)

Explain what basal ganglia does

Explain what cerebellum does

A

Basal Ganglia: supressess movements, selects movements and chains them together to form a unitary action

Cerebellum: smoothes, coordinates, and sequences movement, required for motor learning

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
3
Q

Movement can be fast and slow

Explain both and their comparative accuracy

A

Movement can be fast and slow:

FAST: sudden or exploding punch, LESS acurate

Slow: controlled, very accurate

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
4
Q

Smooth Movements:

  • predictable, _____ to control
  • involves coordinated function of various muscles, motor commands to control for fatigue, balance, weight, usually “________”

Voluntary Movements:

depends on ______ muscles

exceptions are facial muscles, larynx, trachae, esophagus, urethra

A

Smooth Movements:

  • predictable, easy to control
  • involves coordinated function of various muscles, motor commands to control for fatigue, balance, weight, “usually taken for granted”

Voluntary Movements:

  • depends on skeletal muscles
  • exceptions are facial muscles, larynx, trachae, esophagus, urethra
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
5
Q

Different types of movement function independently:

Passive movement:

  • occurs without any _____
  • a defecit of passive movement is felt as ____
  • Lesions in basal ganglia result in ____
  • Lesions in descending motor tracts (UMN) cause ______
A

Passive Movement:

  • occurs without any neural input (when dr bends your arm during a office visit)
  • a defecit of passive movement is felt as resistance to move…caused by central problems
  • Lesions in basal ganglia cause rigitidy (felt as constant resistance)
  • Lesions in decending motor tracts (UMN) cause spasticity (initial resistance then relative ease of movement)
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
6
Q

Reflexes:

Reflexes are simply movements in reaction to stimuli (usually painful), unaffected by voluntary control

Explain areflexia and hyperreflexia and what area do they indicate a problem in?

A

Reflexes are simple movements in reaction to stimuli (usually painful) unaffected by voluntary control

Areflexia: lack of reflex, sign of lower dysfunction (motor neuron, NMJ, muscle)

Hyperreflexia: exuberant reflexes, typically results from lesions in descending motor tracts

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
7
Q

Rigitidy is a sign of a lesion where?

A

Rigitidy is a sign of a lesion in the basal ganglia

Remember also that “spacisity” is a sign of a lesion in the descending motor tracts UMN

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
8
Q

Stereotyped movement:

  • semi________
  • depends on _________
  • rhythmic behaviors (like ____)
  • postural control
A

Stereotyped movement:

  • semiautomatic
  • depends on central pattern generators
  • rhythmic behaviors (example is swimming)
  • postural control
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
9
Q

Self-generated actions: may occur in a response to a stimulus, removed from _____

Give an example

Volitional actions:

  • deliberate, willful
  • _______ (brain area) is involved
  • affects facial movements with _____ effort
  • absence is called paralysis (absence of voluntary movements only is called _____)
    • lesions are where?
A

Self-generated actions: may occur in response to a stimulus, removed from sensory inputs

Example: gazing at a painting, gasping at a story told by a friend

Volitional Actions:

  • deliberate, willful
  • cerebral cortex is involved
  • affects facial movements with voluntary effort
  • absence is called paralysis (absence of voluntary movements only is called volitional paresis), saving emotional activations
    • lesions are motor cortex, cerebral hemisphere
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
10
Q

Emotional actions:

originated for reasons that do not ______, reveal our ______

  • cortex is involved
  • inability to perform emotional actions but with normal volitional movement is called _____
A

Emotional Actions:

  • originated for reasons that do not reach our conciousness, reveal our true feelings
  • cortex is involved
  • Emotional paresis: inability to perform emotional actions but with normal volitional movement
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
11
Q

Definitions:

  1. Flaccid paraylsis: complete dysfunction in ___, ____ or ____, muscles have no ___
  2. Spastic Paraylsis: lesion in ______ or _____, involves hyper____
  3. Akinesia: lack of _____, damage to the _____(involved in late stage _____ disease)
A

Flaccid Paralysis: complete dysfunction in motoneuron, NMJ, or muscle, muscles have no tone

Spastic paralysis: lesion in corticospinal tract or supplementary motor area, involves hyperreflexia

Akinesia: lack of movement, damage to basal ganglia (involved in Parkinson’s disease)

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
12
Q

The Spinal Cord:

The motor nuclei within the SC are arranged according to their function:

______ : neck and back

______: proximal muscles

______: distal muscles

Spinal motor neurons execute movement, and they are clustered in _________

A

The Spinal Cord:

the motor nuclei within the SC are arranged according to their function:

medial: neck and bacl

lateral medial: proximal muscles

lateral distal: distal muscles

Spinal motor neurons execute movement, and they are clustered into motor neuron pools or nuclei

Nuclei contain motorneurons and interneurons

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
13
Q

Muscle Types:

There are three types of muscle;

slow twitch:

  • generate force _____ and maintain it for ___
  • require ____ to function, contain lots of myoglobin, lots of mitochondria

Fast twitch:

  • generate large forces for short periods of time, tire out _____
  • rely on ____ glycolysis, paler in color, less vascularized, contain _____ stores
A

Types of Muscle:

Slow twitch:

  • generate force slowly and maintain it for a long period of time
  • require oxygen to function, contain lots of myoglobin, lots of mitochondria

Fast twitch:

  • genearte large forces for short periods of time
  • rely on anaerobic glycolysis, paler in color, less vascularized, contain glycogen stores
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
14
Q

Muscles are mixed in fibers

Which fiber predominates?

A

Muscles are mixed in fibers

Slow twitch fibers predominate

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
15
Q
Explain the difference between these two muscles and the movements they make
Orbicularis oculi (blinking):

Soleus Muscle

A

Orbicularis Oculi (blinking): fast twitch >>> slow twitch (burst activity), fast short lived movement

Soleus Muscle: slow twitch >>>> fast twitch

  • tonic movement, ongoing for a long time, postural
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
16
Q

The Motor Unit is the smallest division of muscle:

Define the term motor unit

Muscle control is carried out by _______

Motor pools consist of ______

Muscle control is done by _____

A

Motor unit is the smallest division of muscle:
Motor unit: a motor meuron and the number of fibers it innervates

Muscle control is carried out by muscle pools not motor units

Motor pools consist of the alpha motor neurons that innervate a single muscle (a typical muscle is controlled by 100 MNs)

Muscle control is done by muscle pools

17
Q

Motor Unit:

A motor unit is a motor neuron and the amount of fibers it innervates

When an MU fires, ______ contracts

MU size = _______

Muscles used for finely graded movements have MUs with ____ fibers than those used for forceful contraction

All fibers of an MU are of _______

A

MOTOR UNIT:
A motor unit is a single motor neuron and the fibers it innervates

When an MU fires, all the fibers it connects to contract

MU size = number of fibers it innervates

Muscles used for finely graded movements have MUs with fewer fibers than those for forceful contraction

All fibers of an MU are of the same type (either all fast twitch or all slow twitch)

18
Q

Henneman’s Size Principle:

Ordered recruitment of motor neurons, maximal force depends on _______

Small, slow units are active during ____ force contractions : “_____ control”

Large, fast units are active during ____ force contractions: ‘_____ control”

A

Henneman’s Size Priniciple:

Ordered recruitment of motor neurons, maximal force depends on the number of fibers recruited

Small, slow units are active during low force contractions: “smooth control”

Large, fast units are active during high force contractions = “poor control”

19
Q

What is the advantage of the size principle?

Increased excitation to the motor pool ____ the muscle force produced

Requires _______ to control motor pool

A

Advantage of the size principle: It simplifies motor control

Increased excitation to the motor pool increases the muscle force produced

Requires only a limited number of axons to control motor pool (i.e corticospinal tract)

20
Q

An advantage of controlling muscles via a muscle pool is compensation.

It allows for _________ even with partial loss of a motor pathway by ______ the discharge frequency of the remaining neurons

Loss in patient may not be noticed until > 50% neuronal loss has occured

A

An advantage of controlling muscles via a muscle pool is compensation

It allows for continued muscle function even with a partial loss of a motor pathway by increasing the discharge frequency of the remaining neurons

Loss in patient may not be noticed until >50% of neuronal loss has been reached

21
Q

Muscle Denervation:

normal muscle contains Type I and type II fibers arranged in a “checkerboard pattern”

  • This biochemical pattern is conferred by the motor neuron that __________

After a lesion, axon sprouting from the surviving MN creates a new histological type, causing _______ after re-innervation

A

Muscle Denervation:
- normal muscle contains Type I and II fibers arranged in a checkerboard pattern

  • this biochemical pattern is conferred by the motor neuron that innervates each particular muscle fiber

After a lesion, axon sprouting from the surviving MN creates a new histological type, causing fiber-type grouping after reinervation

22
Q

Motor Unit Diseases:

Explain which motor unit diseases come from each region:

  1. Soma
  2. Axons
  3. NMJs or target muscle
A

Motor Unit Diseases:

  1. Soma (motor neuron diseases)
  2. Axon (peripheral neuropathies)
  3. NMJs or target muscles (myopathy)
23
Q

Explain the neurogenic disease that arises from:

Motor neuron

Peripheral Nerve

A

Neurogenic Diseases

Motor neuron: ALS

Peripheral Nerve: Guillan-Barre Syndrome, chronic peripheral neuropathy

24
Q

What do EMGs do?

A

EMGs are recorded with thin needles in the muscle

Helps distinguish between problems in the muscle or higher up (MS, stroke)

EMGs measure motor unit function

25
Q

Neuromuscular Junction Diseases:

Myasthenia gravis:

  • location of problem
  • ion channel or related protein
  • clinical symptoms

Lambert-Eaton MS:

  • location of problem
  • ion channel or related protein
  • main clinical feature
A

NMJ Diseases:

Myasthenia gravis:

  • location: neuromuscular juction
  • ion channel or related protein: alpha 1 nicotinic AChR or MsSK
  • clinical symptoms: muscle weakness and fatigue

Lambert Easton Syndrome:

  • location of the problem: presynaptic terminal of the neuromuscular junction
  • ion channel or related protein: alpha1A or P/Q voltage gated sodium channel
  • main clinical feature: muscle weakness
26
Q

Spinal poliomyelitis or “____” is a viral infection that causes ___ death and results in ____ weakness and ____ paraylsis. Muscles have reduced MU recruitment

A

Spiral poliomyelinitis or “polio” is a viral disease that causes MN death and results in muscle weakness and flaccid paralysis. Muscles have reduced MU recruitment

27
Q

Skeletal muscle is normally electrically silent outisde of the end plate zone. Therefore, abnormal spontaneous activity is considered when there is spontaneous activity outside of the end zone plate, usually lasting around ___ seconds

A

Skeletal muscle is normally electrically silent outside of end plate zone

Therefore, abnormal spontaneous activity is considered when there is spontaneous activity outside of the end zone plate, usually lasting around 3 seconds

28
Q

FIBRILLATIONS:

  • fine, rapid twitching of individual muscle fibers without movment of the muscle as a whole
  • they fire ______ in the absence of innervation
  • Regular firing pattern is _______ Hz

“small rain drops on the roof”

Draw what one looks like

A

Fibrillations:

  • fine, rapid twitching of individual muscle fibers without movement of the muscle as a whole
  • they fire spontaneously in the absence of innervation
  • regular firing pattern is 0.5 - 15 Hz
  • variable amplitude, proportional to fiber diameter
  • they sound like “rain drops on the roof”
29
Q

Fibrillations have two different morphologies:

spikes form and positive wave form

Explain positive wave form

A

Fibrillations:
positive wave form: biphasic, with an initial sharp positivity followed by a long duration of negative phase, duration of 10-30 milliseconds

30
Q

Fasiculations:

spontaneous single motor unit discharge

can be simple or complex

firing pattern is irregular, frequency of ____

sound like “_______’

A

Fasiculations:
spontaneous single motor unit discharge

can be simple or complex

firing pattern is irregular, frequeny of 1-5 Hz

sound like large rain drops on a tin roof

31
Q

Myokimic Discharges:
groups of recurring spontaneous MUAPs that fire in a repetative burst pattern

discharge is ____, for a few seconds of ____ Hz

then followed by silence. then repeat again

sound like marching soldiers

A
32
Q

Myotonic discharge

____ muscle fiber

fires spontaenously, repetetive

high frequency discharge

dive bomber sound

A
33
Q

Label and draw these out

A