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DESCENDING TRACTS

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DESCENDING TRACTS Fiber Types A Fibers: Somatic, myelinated. Alpha ( ): Largest, also referred to as Type I. Beta ( ): Also referred to as Type II. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: DESCENDING TRACTS


1
DESCENDING TRACTS
2
Fiber Types
  • A Fibers
  • Somatic, myelinated.
  • Alpha (a)
  • Largest, also referred to as Type I.
  • Beta (ß)
  • Also referred to as Type II.
  • Gamma (?)
  • Delta (d)
  • Smallest, referred to as Type IV.

3
Fiber Types
  • B Fibers
  • Lightly myelinated.
  • Preganglionic fibers of ANS.
  • C Fibers
  • Unmyelinated.
  • Found in somatic and autonomic systems.
  • Also referred to as Type IV fibers.

4
Fiber Types
  • Sensory fibers are either
  • A-a or A-ß fibers
  • Conduction rate 30-120 m/sec.
  • A-d fibers
  • Conduction rate 4-30 m/sec.
  • C fibers
  • Conduction rate is less than 2.5m/sec.

5
Fiber Types
  • Nociceptors and thermoreceptors are related to C
    fibers or A-d fibers.

6
Generalizations Motor Paths
  • Typical descending pathway consists of a series
    of two motor neurons
  • Upper motor neurons (UMNs)
  • Lower motor neurons (LMNs)
  • Does not take into consideration the
    association neurons between UMNs and LMNs

7
Upper Motor Neurons
  • Are entirely within the CNS.
  • Originate in
  • Cerebral cortex
  • Cerebellum
  • Brainstem
  • Form descending tracts

8
Lower Motor Neurons
  • Begin in CNS.
  • From anterior horns of spinal cord.
  • From brainstem cranial nerve nuclei.
  • Made up of alpha motor neurons (A-a).
  • Make up spinal and cranial nerves.

9
UMN Classification
  • Classified according to where they synapse in the
    ventral horn
  • Medial activation system
  • Innervate postural and girdle muscles
  • Lateral activation system
  • Associated with distally located muscles used
    for fine movements
  • Nonspecific activating system
  • Facilitate local reflex arcs

10
Pyramidal System
  • Characteristics
  • Upper motor neurons
  • 75 85 Decussate in pyramids.
  • Remainder decussate near synapse with lower
    motor neurons.
  • Most synapse with association neurons in
    spinal cord central gray.

11
Pyramidal System
  • Components
  • Corticospinal Tract
  • Corticobulbar Tract

12
Corticospinal Tract Divisions
  • Lateral corticospinal tract
  • Made up of corticospinal fibers that have
    crossed in medulla.
  • Supply all levels of spinal cord.
  • Anterior corticospinal tract
  • Made up of uncrossed corticospinal fibers that
    cross near level of synapse with LMNs.
  • Supply neck and upper limbs.

13
Corticospinal Tract Functions
  • Add speed and agility to conscious movements
  • Especially movements of hand.
  • Provide a high degree of motor control
  • (i.e., movement of individual fingers)

14
Corticospinal Tract Lesions
  • Reduced muscle tone
  • Clumsiness
  • Weakness
  • Not complete paralysis
  • Note complete paralysis results if both
    pyramidal and extrapyramidal systems are involved
    (as is often the case).

15
Corticobulbar Tract
  • Innervates the head
  • Most fibers terminate in reticular formation near
    cranial nerve nuclei.
  • Association neurons
  • Leave reticular formation and synapse in
    cranial nerve nuclei.
  • Synapse with lower motor neurons.

16
Extrapyramidal System
  • Includes descending motor tracts that do not pass
    through medullary pyramids or corticobulbar
    tracts.
  • Includes
  • Rubrospinal tracts
  • Vestibulospinal tracts
  • Reticulospinal tracts

17
Rubrospinal Tract
  • Begins in red nucleus.
  • Decussates in midbrain.
  • Descends in lateral funiculus (column).
  • Function closely related to cerebellar function.
  • Lesions
  • Impairment of distal arm and hand movement.
  • Intention tremors (similar to cerebellar
    lesions)

18
Vestibulospinal Tract
  • Originates in vestibular nuclei
  • Receives major input from vestibular nerve
  • (CN VIII)
  • Descends in anterior funiculus (column).
  • Synapses with LMNs to extensor muscles
  • Primarily involved in maintenance of upright
    posture.

19
Reticulospinal Tract
  • Originates in various regions of reticular
    formation.
  • Descends in anterior portion of lateral funiculus
    (column).
  • Thought to mediate larger movements of trunk and
    limbs that do not require balance or fine
    movements of upper limbs.

20
BASAL NUCLEI
21
Basal Ganglia Functions
  • Compare proprioceptive information and movement
    commands.
  • Sequence movements.
  • Regulate muscle tone and muscle force.
  • May be involved in selecting and inhibiting
    specific motor synergies.

22
Basal Ganglia Functions
  • Basal ganglia are vital for normal movement but
    they have no direct connections with lower motor
    neurons.
  • Influence LMNs
  • Through planning areas of cerebral cortex.
  • Pedunculopontine nucleus of midbrain.

23
Basal Ganglia Functions
  • Basal nuclei set organisms level of
    responsiveness to stimuli.
  • Extrapyramidal disorders are associated with
    basal nuclei pathology
  • Negative symptoms of underresponsiveness
  • Akinesias
  • i.e. Parkinson disease
  • Positive symptoms of over-responsiveness
  • Choreas, athetoses, ballisms
  • i.e. Huntingtons chorea

24
Basal Nuclei Components
  • Corpus striatum
  • Substantia nigra (within the midbrain)
  • Subthalamic nuclei (diencephalon)
  • Red nucleus (?)
  • Claustrum (?)
  • Nucleus accumbens (?)

25
Corpus Striatum
  • Composed of caudate nucleus lentiform nucleus
  • Striatum caudate nucleus putamen.
  • Pallidum globus pallidus.
  • Putamen globus pallidus lentiform nucleus.
  • Controls large subconscious movements of the
    skeletal muscles.
  • The globus pallidus regulates muscle tone.

26
Corpus Striatum
27
Substantia Nigra Subdivisions
  • Dorsal pars compacta
  • Has melanin containing neurons and
    dopaminergic neurons.
  • Ventral pars reticularis
  • Has iron-containing glial cells.
  • Has serotonin and GABA (no melanin).

28
Substantial Nigra
29
Input Nuclei
  • Striatum
  • Caudate nucleus
  • Putamen
  • Nucleus accumbens
  • Receive widespread input from
  • Neocortex
  • Intralaminar nuclei
  • Substantia nigra
  • Dorsal raphe nucleus

30
Input Nuclei
  • Striatum projects to
  • Globus pallidus
  • Substantia nigra
  • Pars reticularis
  • Via gabaminergic fibers
  • Motor and sensory cortices project to putamen.
  • Association areas of all lobes project to caudate
    nucleus.

31
Output Nuclei
  • Globus pallidus (medial part)
  • Substantia nigra
  • Pars reticularis
  • Ventral pallidum
  • Fibers project to
  • VA/VL nuclei
  • Mostly inhibitory

32
General Core Circuit
  • Cerebral cortex to
  • Striatum to
  • Globus pallidus to
  • Thalamus to
  • Portions of motor cortex to
  • Upper motor neurons

33
Thalamic Fasciculi
  • Ansa lenticularis
  • Consists of fibers from dorsal portion of
    globus pallidus.
  • Loops under internal capsule.
  • To VA/VL complex.

34
Thalamic Fasciculi
  • Lenticular fasciculus
  • Consists of fibers from ventral portion of
    globus pallidus.
  • Passes across the internal capsule.
  • To VA/VL complex.

35
Dopamine Neuronal System
  • Consists of nigrostriatal fibers
  • From pars compacta of substantia nigra
  • To striatum
  • Dopaminergic

36
Direct Basal Ganglia Circuit
  • Motor cortex projects to putamen
  • Excitatory (glutamate)
  • Putamen projects to output nuclei (globus
    pallidus internus and substantia nigra
    reticularis)
  • Inhibitory (GABA and substance P)

37
Basal Ganglia ConnectionsRed excitatory Black
Inhibitory
Motor areas of cerebral cortex
Ventrolateral thalamus
Putamen
Globus pallidus externus
Output nuclei
Subthalamic nuclei
Pedunculo- Pontine nuclei
Lateral Activation pathways
Reticulospinal and Vestibulospinal pathways
Substantia nigra compacta
38
Direct Basal Ganglia Circuit
  • Output nuclei project to motor thalamus (VA-VL)
    and pedunculopontine nuclei
  • Inhibitory (GABA)
  • Ventrolateral (VA-VL) thalamus projects to motor
    cortex
  • Excitatory
  • Therefore
  • Increasing input to putamen increases activity
    in corticofugal fibers

39
Direct Basal Ganglia Circuit
  • Pedunculopontine nuclei project to reticulospinal
    and vestibulospinal pathways.
  • Stimulation of pedunculopontine nuclei elicit
    rhythmical behaviors such as locomotor patterns.

40
Indirect Basal Ganglia Circuit
  • Motor cortex to putamen
  • Excitatory (glutamate)
  • Putamen to globus pallidus externus
  • Inhibitory (GABA and enkephalins)
  • Globus pallidus externus to subthalamic nuclei
  • Inhibition (GABA)

41
Indirect Basal Ganglia Circuit
  • Subthalamic nuclei to output nuclei (substantia
    nigra reticularis)
  • Excitatory (glutamate)
  • Output nuclei to VA-VL complex (motor thalamus)
  • Inhibitory (GABA)

42
Indirect Basal Ganglia Circuit
  • VA-VL complex to motor cortex
  • Excitatory
  • Therefore decrease in corticofugal pathways.

43
Input from Substantia Nigra Compacta
  • Projects to putamen
  • Excitatory (dopamine)
  • Two kinds of receptors in basal ganglia
    circuit
  • D1 facilitates activity in direct pathway
  • D2 inhibits activity in indirect pathway
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