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Neurophysiological Basis of Movement

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Neurophysiological Basis of Movement World VI: Motor Disorders Sites of Damage in Nerve and Muscle Site Disorder Neuron cell body ALS (Lou Gehrig s disease) Root ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Neurophysiological Basis of Movement


1
Neurophysiological Basis of Movement
World VI Motor Disorders
2
Lecture 30 Peripheral Muscular and Neurological
Disorders
Sites of Damage in Nerve and Muscle
3
Muscular Dystrophies
  • Genetic diseases progressive weakness and
    degeneration of skeletal muscles
  • Duchenne and Becker dystrophy1 in 3,500 to 5,000
    births
  • Mostly males are affected

4
Muscular Dystrophies Duchenne Dystrophy
  • Mutation of a gene responsible for dystrophin, a
    protein involved in maintaining integrity of
    muscle fibers
  • Clinical symptoms at 2 to 6 years all muscles
    are affected
  • Late to walk waddling, unsteady gait
  • Respirator dependence by the age of 20

5
Muscular Dystrophies Becker Dystrophy
  • Similar to Duchenne dystrophy mutation of a gene
    responsible for dystrophin
  • Clinical symptoms appear at adolescence
  • Slower disease progression longer life expectancy

6
Muscular Dystrophies Myotonic Dystrophy
  • Most common adult form of muscular dystrophy
  • Myotonia prolonged episode of muscle activity
    after its voluntary contraction
  • Commonly in finger and facial muscles
  • High-stepping, floppy-footed gait
  • Long face drooping eyelids

7
Myotonic Discharge
8
Stiff Person Syndrome
  • Excessive motoneuron excitation
  • Starts at 30 to 60 years of age
  • Leads to boardlike rigidity of trunk muscles

9
Stiff Person Syndrome
10
Continuous Muscle Fiber Activity Syndromes
Tetanus (induced by tetanus toxin)
  • The toxin blocks postsynaptic inhibition at the
    spinal level.
  • EMG bursts can be stopped by neuromuscular or
    peripheral nerve block.
  • Discharges are attenuated during sleep and under
    general or spinal anesthesia.

11
Continuous Muscle Fiber Activity Syndromes
12
Neuromyotonia
Small potentials on the background on voluntary
activation
13
Myasthenia Gravis
14
Myasthenia Gravis Epidemiology
  • 3 to 4 new cases per million annually
  • Prevalence 60 cases per million
  • Can start at any age
  • Women are affected 21 over men
  • Death rate in the 1930s was 40 death rate in
    the 1970s1980s was 7

15
Myasthenia Gravis Physiology
  • Autoimmune process (the body produced antibodies
    to ACh receptors)
  • Reduction of ACh receptors
  • Reduction of postsynaptic potentials

16
Myasthenia Gravis Increased Duration of Action
Potentials in the Muscle
17
Myasthenia Gravis Treatment
  • ACh-esterase inhibitors (neostigmine, distigmine)
  • Thymectomy to suppress autoimmune processes
  • Plasmapheresis to remove autoimmune antibodies
  • Side effects with any treatment

18
Peripheral Neuropathies Mononeuropathies
  • Slowed conduction in a single nerve
  • Reduced amplitude of motor and/or sensory
    potentials
  • Signs of denervation
  • Carpal tunnel syndrome entrapment of the median
    nerve at the wrist
  • Ulnar nerve can be entrapped near the elbow
  • Brachial plexus lesions mostly seen in muscles
    innervated by median and ulnar nerves
  • Peroneal peroneal pressure palsy
  • Tibial tarsal tunnel syndrome
  • Sciatic

19
Carpal Tunnel Syndrome
20
Peripheral Neuropathies Multiple Mononeuropathies
  • Diabetes mellitus
  • Polyarteritis nodosa (connective tissue disorder,
    vasculitis)
  • Leprosy

21
Diabetes (Diabetes Mellitus) Impaired Ability to
Metabolize Glucose
  • Total number of cases in the U.S. 16 million
  • Yearly increase 650,000 new cases
  • Long-term complications
  • Peripheral sensory neuropathy
  • Peripheral motor neuropathy
  • Loss of autonomic nerve function
  • Atrophy of peripheral tissues

22
Diabetes
23
Diabetes
Reorganization of postural control switch to
alternative sources of information
24
Consequence of Diabetes Atrophy of Peripheral
Tissues
  • Is it a consequence of inadequate blood supply?
  • Is it a consequence of abnormal pressure
    distribution with foci of high pressure?
  • Studies by the group of Peter Cavanagh

25
Diabetes
26
Peripheral Neuropathies Polyneuropathies
  • May be associated with demyelinating neuropathies
  • Guillain-BarrĂ© syndrome reduced recruitment
    conduction block may result in permanent axonal
    loss
  • Chronic inflammatory demyelinating
    polyneuropathy common recovery, but nerve
    conduction velocity may remain slow

27
Peripheral Neuropathies Polyneuropathies
  • Axonal neuropathies (mostly of toxic origin)
  • Neuronal degenerations
  • Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (Lou Gehrigs
    disease)
  • Poliomyelitis (enterovirus destroying anterior
    horn cells EMGs show chronic denervation may
    lead to weakness and paina postpolyo syndrome)

28
ALS
  • 20,000 Americans have ALS (one in 15,000).
  • 5,000 people in the United States are diagnosed
    with ALS each year.
  • Men are affected more often than women.
  • ALS most commonly strikes people between 40 and
    60 years of age.
  • About 5 to 10 percent of all ALS cases are
    inherited.
  • About 20 percent of all familial cases result
    from a specific genetic defect mutation of
    superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD1).

29
ALS
  • The earliest symptoms may include twitching,
    cramping, or stiffness of muscles muscle
    weakness affecting an arm or a leg slurred and
    nasal speech or difficulty chewing or
    swallowing.
  • Patients have increasing problems with moving,
    swallowing (dysphagia), and speaking or forming
    words (dysarthria).
  • Patients have tight and stiff muscles
    (spasticity) and exaggerated reflexes
    (hyperreflexia).
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