Motor System22 018
Motor System22 018
Motor System22 018
Part 2
PG- Ophthalmology
22 7 2018
1
Contents
• Nervous system structures in involved in body
movements
• Integration of motor activity in the body
– Cerebral cortical level
– Sub-cortical / Brainstem level
– Spinal level
• The descending pathways that modify the
output of the spinal /cranial motor neuron
• The effects of lesions at various levels of the
motor hierarchy
CNS intergration
1
2 3
4 5
Different level of integration of motor activity
in the body- hierarchical nature
– Cerebral cortical level
• motor cortical regions in planning and execution
of voluntary activity
– Sub-cortical level/brainstem
• Cerebellum in coordinating and planning
movements
• basal ganglia in the planning and execution of
motor patterns
• Brainstem nuclei maintain tone of muscle
– Spinal level
-spinal reflexes in movements/postural control
• Two major descending pathways
1. Posture/balance (gross movements)
– Proximal/axial muscles
• ventral corticospinal tract
• medial brain stem pathways (tectospinal,
reticulospinal, and vestibulospinal tracts)
• Upper Levels
– Initiation, Inhibition or Facilitation of Motor
Functions
– Voluntary Motor Movements
8
Voluntary movement
• Fine skilled movements
10
Organization of CNS
1
2 3
4 11
Regions of the Brain divided by Function
12
Primary Motor cortex- ( Muscle Control)
15
Control of voluntary Movement
Motor system-organization cont.
1.Plan -cerebral cortex, basal ganglia,cerebellum
Effectors - muscles
Sensory/ feed back -Proprioception
-Muscle spindle 17
-Vision/vestibular
MOTOR Motor1.Cerebral cortex
• Generates the idea for voluntary movements.
• Issues motor commands via corticospinal and
• corticobulbar tracts.
• Several motor areas are present in cerebral cortex
Primary motor area
Supplementary motor area
Premotor area
Posterior parietal cortex
Premotor area
– also contains a somatotopic map
– receives input from sensory regions of the
parietal cortex and projects to M1,spinal
cord,brain stem reticular formation.
– involved in control of proximal limb muscles
needed to orient the body for movement. 19
Posterior parietal cortex
• Provide fibers for corticospinal &
corticobulbar tracts
• Involve in
– executing learned sequences of
movements such as eating with a knife and
fork.
– aiming the hands toward an object and
manipulating it
– concerned with hand–eye coordination.
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2. Basal ganglia
23
5. Spinal cord
common pathway for descending/ascending tracts
Final relay station for descending motor tracts
Contains lower motor neurons
6. Receptors
Provides sensory feedback.
Spatial orientation is dependent on input from
vestibular receptors, visual cues, proprioceptors
in joint capsules, and cutaneous touch and
pressure receptors.
CONTROL OF MOVEMENT –motor tracts
Two pathways:
1.Cortical motor pathways
• They are corticospinal (also called pyramidal
system) and corticobulbar tracts
• Fine movemnts in distal muscles
2.Brain stem pathways (also called extra-
pyramidal tracts
• importance for posture/balance (proximal
muscles)
• Originate in the brainstem
• E.g. reticulospinal, vestibulospinal, tectospinal,
rubrospinal.
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26
Descending corticospinal
motor tracts
27
Descending corticospinal
motor tracts
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Descending /motor tracts in cerebral cortex
Corona radiata
Internal capsule
Corticospinal tracts
Lateral corticospinal tract
Anterior corticospinal tract
(travel with brain stem pathways)
29
Origin of corticospinal tracts
III/. V SHAPED
Anterior limb, Genu, Posterior limb 31
Internal capsule
THE INTERNAL CAPSULE
38
Upper motor neurons cont’
1. Cortical pathways
Motor neurons are in cerebral cortex
42
42
. Corticospinal tracts
43
Corticospinal tracts
• Descending motor commands
– Cell body in cerebral cortex
– Axon descends through
• internal capsule
• cerebral peduncle,
• pyramids of the medulla, where it
crosses the midline (most) to form the lateral
corticospinal tract
OR
• doesn’t cross (some) to form the anterior
corticospinal tract (probably cross right before
synapsing) 44
Corticobulbar Tract
47
All theses descending tracts (cortical and extra-
pyramidal brainstem tracts) are called “upper
motor neuron”
• They have different functions in controlling
the muscles
• For example when you are writing while
sitting on a chair.
• Cortical pathways are importance for writing
• Extrapyramidal/brain stem pathways are
importance for maintaining balance and
posture in sitting position (trunk and leg
muscles)
48
• Upper motor neurons cont;
Lesions :
Above motor decussation – Sings &
symptoms on the opposite side of the body.
• Below the crossing – Ipsilateral, same side.
49
Signs of lesion to brain stem pathways
(extra-pyramidal tracts)`
1. spasticity
2. Clasp knife rigidity
3. clonus)
4. exaggerated muscle reflex
50
Signs of lesion to the pyramidal tracts
• Positive Babinski sign (extensor planter
response). Great toe & other toes fan outward
(extension) in response to scratching the skin
along the lateral aspect of the sole of the foot.
– The normal response is plantar flexion of all toes.
• Absent superficial abdominal reflexes. The
abdominal muscles fail to contract when the
skin of the abdomen is scratched.
• Absent cremasteric reflex.. The cremaster
muscle fails to contract when the skin on the
medial side of the thigh is stroked.
51
• In summary, a lesion involving all of the
corticospinal and corticobulbar fibers from
the left cerebral cortex produces following
motor defects.
1.Muscle paralysis
• Right hemiparesis/heiplegia (weakness of
the right upper and lower limbs).
• Weakness of the right face below the
forehead.
• Deviation of the tongue to the right upon
protrusion.
52
Lower motor neuron (LMN)
53
53
Lower motor neuron (LMN)
This include
I. Spinal motor neuron - alpha motor neuron
– Cell body in anterior horn of spinal cord
– Axon leaves through anterior roots to innervate muscle
54
Lower motor neuron (LMN)
Cell body in anterior horn of spinal cord/motor
nuclei of C.N.
55
LMN cont’
LMN is Influenced by
• cortical tracts
• brain stem pathways
• Muscle spindle
56
Upper Motor Neuron
(UMN)
57
Upper motor neuron and muscle spindle
• Even during at rest muscle is partially contracted
due to continuously stimulating the muscle
spindle resulting tone in the muscle
• Reflex arc maintain tone of the muscle at rest
• In lower motor neuron damage reflex arc
interrupted and loss of muscle spindle activity
results loss of tone (hypotonia)
• Upper motor neuron keep inhibiting muscle
spindle through gamma motor neuron.
• When upper motor neurons damage muscle
spindle release from inhibition and become
hyperactive leading to hypertonic muscles
58
Upper motor neurons and gamma
motor neuron
• Higher centers in brain usually exert an
inhibition on g efferent.
61
Knee reflex
Normal Hyperreflexia
Exaggerated response 62
Plantar Reflex
Signs & symptoms of LMN lesions
(Damage to anterior horn cell , ventral root or
peripheral nerve)
• Localized flaccid paralysis
• Muscle atrophy /wasting (reduce muscle bulk)
due to lack of innervation
• Absence of reflexes/Loss of tone / Hypotonia
• Fasciculations (spontanteous, irregular muscle
twitching)
• Change in electrical excitability – Fibrillation
potentials
• Electrophysiological evidence of denervation &
impaired nerve conduction.
• Trophic changes 64
Trophic changes
• Loss of sweating (Anhydrosis)
• Skin dry, wrinkled and shiny
• Loss of hair
• Destruction of nails
• Injuries/ulcers in the skin
65
• References
• Ganong 24e
66