Exam #6: Postural Control & Locomotion Flashcards

1
Q

What are the functions of medial system motor pathways?

A

1) Control of posture & locomotion

2) Control of axial & proximal muscles

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2
Q

What is the sensory or afferent limb of the vestibulocollic (vestibulo-cervical)? Does this reflex act at the neck or limbs?

A

This is the reflex that rights head position WITHOUT visual input

  • Input is via the vestibular system
  • Output to the cervical spine
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3
Q

What is the sensory or afferent limb of the vestibulospinal? Does this reflex act at the neck or limbs?

A

Lateral vestibulospinal tract originates in the “lateral vestibular nucleus”

  • Projects down the length of the spinal cord IPSILATERAL motoneurons
  • Stimulation produces EXENTSION

*Causes DECEREBRATE posturing in conjunction with the PONTINE RETICULOSPINAL tract

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4
Q

What is the sensory or afferent limb of the cervicocollic? Does this reflex act at the neck or limbs? Does this reflex act at the neck or limbs?

A

This is another reflex the maintains the vertical position the head

  • Input is proprioception from the neck muscle spindles
  • Ouput is back to neck musculature
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5
Q

What is the sensory or afferent limb of the tonic neck reflexes? Does this reflex act at the neck or limbs?

A
  • Proprioceptors in the neck
  • Causes flexion of the legs and extension of the arms with EXTENSION OF THE NECK

*Antagnoist to the tonic neck reflex

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6
Q

What is the sensory or afferent limb of the labyrinth righting reflex? Does this reflex act at the neck or limbs?

A
  • Vestibular system
  • Causes flexion of the arms and extension of the legs with FLEXION of the neck

*Antagonist to tonic neck reflex

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7
Q

What are symmetric tonic neck reflexes? What kind of patient would exhibit these reflexes?

A

This is normally seen in infants at ~4-6 months & ends at 1 year

  • Neck EXTENDED
  • Upper limbs EXTEND
  • Lower limbs FLEX

**This can be seen in patients with vestibular damage

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8
Q

What are asymmetric tonic neck reflexes? What kind of patient would exhibit these reflexes?

A

This is a primitive reflex normally seen in infants (suppressed at 6 months)

  • Turn head
  • Limbs on SAME side EXTEND
  • Limbs on OPPOSITE side FLEX

**This can be seen in patients with vestibular impairment

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9
Q

What are the feed-forward mechanisms for controlling posture?

A

Feedforward= anticipatory

- Corrective action is applied PRIOR to movement

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10
Q

What are the feedback mechanisms for controlling posture?

A

Feedback= compensatory

- Corrective action is applied AFTER movement

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11
Q

Where are stepping pattern generators (SPGs) located?

A

Spinal cord

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12
Q

What do SPGs do?

A

Stepping reflex i.e. elicit alternating patters of flexion and extension of the knee & hip

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13
Q

What was the swinging room experiment?

A

This was an experiment where test subjects were put in a room where the floor was STATIONARY, and the moved back & forth to observe their postural reflexes

  • Walls moved back, subject swayed back
  • Walls moved forward, subject swayed forward
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14
Q

How was the swinging room experiment related to the role of vision in postural stability?

A

This experiment demonstrated that postural stability was partly due to visual input

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15
Q

Which age group, toddlers or adults was most strongly affected by the visual stimulus in the swinging room experiment?

A

Toddlers–fell when they tried to stand in the swinging room

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16
Q

List sensory systems involved in the control of posture.

A

1) Vestibular
2) Proprioceptive
3) Cutaneous
4) Visual

**Note that “vection” is the term used to described perception of self-motion induced by visual stimuli

17
Q

Define the term posture . How does posture differ from postural stability?

A

Posture= orientation of body & limbs in space

Postural stability= balance

18
Q

What are the three behavioral functions of postural adjustments?

A

1) Support head & neck against gravity/ external forces
2) Keep center of gravity balance over base
3) Stabilize supporting parts of the body during movement of other parts

19
Q

What is decerebrate posturing?

A

Extension of all 4 limbs & neck

20
Q

What is decorticate posturing?

A

Extension of legs & flexion of arms

21
Q

What lesions cause decerebrate posturing?

A

Lesions to the upper pons (below the red nucleus in the midbrain)

22
Q

What lesions cause decorticate posturing?

A

Lesions in the:

  • Internal capsule
  • Upper midbrain/ diencephalon
23
Q

Clinically, what causes a switch from decorticate to decerebrate posturing?

A

Extension of an infarct from involving the upper midbrain to upper pons will cause a switch in posturing type

24
Q

What stretch reflex will occur to maintain posture in an experiment with BACKWARD movement of a platform?

A

Gastrocnemius

25
Q

What will happen to the gasttrocnemius reflex with repeated backward movement of the platform?

A

Progressively earlier reflex

26
Q

What happens when the person trained to backward movement of the platform has the platform tilted?

A

Postural instability–reflex diminishes with time now

27
Q

What two extrapyramidal tracts descend the length of the spinal cord & facilitate motor neurons of extensor muscles?

A

Lateral vestibulospinal tract

Pontine reticulospinal tract

28
Q

What is the general function of the medial vestibulospinal tract?

A

Reflex head movement in response to vestibular stimuli

**Note that the tract only goes down to the upper thoracic cord

29
Q

What is the general function of the reticulospinal system?

A
  • Anticipatory postural adjustments

- Activation of locomotoion & controlling speed

30
Q

What is the colliculospinal tract? What is the function of the colliculospinal tract?

A
  • Also called “Tectospinal tract”
  • Projects from superior colliculi to cervical spinal cord

*Involved in the control of neck muscles