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Gangguan Motorik
- appetizer ^^v



                              Ersifa fatimah
                                     PPDS Neurologi
                  RSUD Dr Soetomo – Univ. Airlangga
                                               2013
Referensi
Motor Disturbances             Disorder of Motility
• Muscle                       • Motor paralysis
• LMN                          • Abnormal of movement &
• UMN                            posture due to disease of
• Basal Ganglia                  Basal Ganglia
• Cerebellum                   • Incoordination & other
                                 disorders of Cerebellar
(Waxman, 2010)                   function
                               • Tremor, Myoclonus, Focal
                                 dystonias, and Tics
                               • Disorder of Stance & Gait
                               (Adams & Victor’s, 2005)

                         ERS                             2
The Motor System (DeJong, 2010)
Level: Motor unit, Spinal cord, Pyramidal, Extrapyramidal

Motor strength & Power

Muscle Tone

Muscle Volume & Contour

Abnormality of Movement




                              ERS                           3
Knowing the structure and function
of the different levels of motor control,
            the relationships
      between the motor systems,
   and the changes in motor activity
          that occur in disease
         helps in understanding
     disorders of the motor system.
                                DeJong, 2010

                   ERS                      4
Sensory and motor functions are interdependent
    in the performance of volitional movement,
                 and it is not possible
         to consider the motor system apart
              from the sensory system.
         Impairment of sensation may affect
                all aspects of motion—
    volitional, reflex, postural, tonic, and phasic.

DeJong, 2010




                          ERS                      5
Corticospinal & Corticobulbar Tracts, Composition

         10%
                                     area 4 & 6
35%                  55%
                                     area 3, 1, 2
                                     Others: frontal & parietal




                                The axons arising from the large
                                pyramidal cells in layer V (Betz's
                                cells) of area 4 contribute only
                                about 5% of the fibers of the
                                corticospinal tract and its
                                pyramidal portion.

                                Waxman, 2010


                       ERS                                        6
Disorder of Motility
 The following parts of the nervous system are engaged primarily in the control of
 movement and, in the course of disease, yield a number of characteristic derangements
 (Adams & Victor, 2005)
Large motor neurons in the anterior horns of the      Paralysis due to an interruption of
spinal cord & the motor nuclei of the brainstem      LMNs.
the axons comprise the anterior spinal roots , the    Complete lesions of LMN result in a
spinal nerves & cranial nerves  innervate the        loss of all movement—
skeletal muscles.                                     voluntary, automatic, postural, and
The LMNs are the final common path by which all        reflex.
neural impulses are transmitted to muscle.
Motor neurons in the frontal cortex adjacent to the   Paralysis due to dysfunction of
rolandic fissure connect with the spinal motor         upper motor (corticospinal)
neurons by a system of fibers known as the pyramidal neurons.
tract.
Since the motor fibers that extend from the cerebral
cortex to the spinal cord are not confined to the
pyramidal tract , they are more accurately designated
as the corticospinal tract, or UMNs,to distinguish
them from the LMNs.
                                            ERS                                         7
Disorder of Motility (Adams & Victor, 2005)

Several brain stem nuclei that project to the spinal
cord, notably the pontine and medullary reticular
nuclei, vestibular nuclei, and red nuclei. + their
descending fibers
 posture & movement (particularly when
   movement is highly automatic and repetitive)
Certain of these brain stem nuclei are influenced by
the motor or premotor regions of the cortex, e.g., via
corticoreticulospinal relays.
Two subcortical systems: the basal ganglia               Involuntary movements &
(striatum, pallidum, and related structures, including   abnormalities of posture due to
the substantia nigra and subthalamic nucleus) & the      disease of the basal ganglia
cerebellum                                               Abnormalities of coordination
 Play important role in the control of muscle           (ataxia) due to lesions in the
tone, posture, and coordination of movement by           cerebellum.
virtue of its connections with the corticospinal
system (via thalamocortical fibers) and other
descending cortical pathways


                                               ERS                                         8
Disorder of Motility (Adams & Victor, 2005)

Several other parts of the cerebral cortex, particularly   Apraxic or nonparalytic disturbances
the premotor & supplementary motor cortices.               of purposive movement due to
These structures are involved in the programming           involvement of association
(i.e., the sequencing and modulation) of voluntary         pathways in the cerebrum
movement.
The prefrontal cortex  planning & initiation of
willed movement.
Fibers from the prefrontal cortex project to the
supplementary & premotor cortex and provide the
input to the some restrictly motor areas.
Similarly, certain parietal cortical areas (superior
parietal lobule) supply the somatic sensory
information that activates the premotor and
supplementary motor cortices and leads to directed
movement. In addition, other parts of the nervous
system concerned with tactile, visual, and auditory
sensation are connected by fiber tracts with the
motor cortex. These association pathways provide
their own sensory regulation of motor function

                                               ERS                                         9
Levels:
      • Motor Unit (LMN)
      • Segmental/spinal cord
      • Suprasegmental
           – Various descending
             systems modulate
             activity in segmental
             level
           – Brainstem, cerebellar,
             extrapyramidal,
             pyramidal
           – Psychomotor/ cortical
             associative
      Fig: The most important descending
      pathways that act upon the anterior
      horn cell of the spinal cord (deJong
ERS   2010)                                10
(DeJong, 2010)

      • Lat ReticuloSpinal:
          – influence the musculature of
            the trunk.
      • Med TectoSpinal:
          – reflex movement
          – Trunk, neck, eyes ~ visual
            stimuli
      • Lat CorticoSpinal:
          – Hand, finger movement
      • RubroSpinal:
          – Hand, finger movement
          – Flexor muscle tone
          – Postural
            mechanism, standing/righting
            reflex
      • Lat VestibuloSpinal:
          – Postural
            mechanism, standing/righting
            reflex
      Mainly control trunk &
      proximal extremity
ERS                                      11
DeJong, 2010




ERS         12
Waxman, 2010




ERS           13
Motor Paralysis
Terminology
Paralysis                    Loss of involuntary movement due to interruption of
                             motor pathway (cerebrum – muscle fiber)
Paresis                      A lesser degree of paralysis / partial loss
Plegia                       Severe / complete loss of motor function
Focal ~ asymmetry            Ex: hemi-
Generalized ~ symmetry       (although the weakness not truly general, ex.:
                             scapuloperoneal syndrome)
                             Truly generalized  bulbar is impaired
Multifocal                   Ex.: bilateral CTS
Non-focal                    Generalized, predominantly proximal, predominanly
                             distal
These various patterns have differential diagnostic and localizing significance.
Identification of the process causing weakness is further aided by accompanying signs,
such as reflex alterations and sensory loss. (DeJong, 2010)
                                          ERS                                       14
Pattern of Paralysis &
            Their Diagnosis
                 Adams & Victor, 2005




       Apraxia: a state in which a clear-
       minded patient with no
       weakness, ataxia, or other
       extrapyramidal derangement, and
       no defect of the primary modes
       of sensation, loses the ability to
       execute highly complex and
       previously learned skills and
       gestures.




        NMJ
ERS                                  15
Mumenthaler, 2004
ERS                       16
Bradley, 2010




ERS              17
Bradley, 2010




ERS              18
Mumenthaler, 2004


ERS                 19
Bradley, 2010




ERS              20
Bradley, 2010




ERS              21
ERS   22
Bradley, 2010




ERS              23
ERS   24
ERS   25
ERS   Bradley, 2010
                  26
ERS   27
Mumenthaler, 2004


ERS                 28
Bradley, 2010




ERS              29
Bradley, 2010




ERS           30
Proximal, Distal & General Weakness   Bradley, 2010




                     ERS                         31
Adams & Victor’s, 2005
ERS                     32
Features of UMN vs LMN Weakness
                                    (DeJong, 2005)

         +           UMN                        LMN
Weakness             Corticospinal              Generalized, focal, predominantly
distribution         distribution, hemi-,       distal, predominantly proximal,
                     para-, quadri-, mono-,     No preferential involvement of
                     faciobrachial              corticopsinal innervated muscle
Sensory loss         Central pattern            None, stocking glove, peropheral / root
distribution                                    distribution
Sphincter function   Sometimes impaired         Normal (except for cauda equina
                                                lesion)
Pain                 No                         Sometimes
Other CNS sign       Possibly                   No
Corticospinal distribution:
• Distal muscle
• Upper ext: esp hand; wrist, finger & elbow extnsor, supinator, external rotator,
   abductor shoulder
• Lower ext: foot & toe dorsiflexor, knee flexor, hip flexor & internal rotator,
                                          ERS                                        33
Muscle Tone (DeJong, 2010)
     Hypotonia                                    Hypertonia
Myopathy   Cerebellar    Spasticity                  Rigidity           Dystonia:
            disease   most marked      the increased tone occurs to     transient or
                      near the         more or less the same degree     sustained
                      middle of the    throughout the range of          hypertonic
                      range of         passive motion of a limb, and is conditions that
                      motion, more     independent                      do not fit into
                      apparent with    of the speed of the movement the other
                      fast than with                                    categories
                      slow passive       Lead pipe          Cogwheel      Paratonia:
                      movement         smooth            ratchety, jerky, increase in tone
                                       resistance        tremulous        in a limb
                                       throughout        variation in the more or less
                                       the range         hypertonia,      proportional to
                                       independent       due primarily    the examiner's
                                       of the rate of    to               attempt to
                                       move.             superimposed move it.
                                                         tremor           (Gegenhalten)


                                         ERS                                         35
Muscle Volume & Contour
                                (DeJong, 2010)

                    Atrophy                              Hypertrophy
 Neurogenic       Myogenic         Disuse         True           Pseudo
Weakness //     Weakness >>   Immobilization: Physiologic   apparent muscle
wasting         wasting       Wasting >>                    enlargement due to
May be          Mild-moderate weakness                      replacement of
severe                        Mild-moderate                 diseased muscle by
                              Recovers quickly              fat and fibrous
Anterior horn                 with resumption               tissue
cell                         of uses                       Ex: Duchenne
peripheral
nerve

UMN:
Usually not
followed by
atrophy
                                      ERS                                   36
Abnormal of movement & posture
     due to disease of Basal Ganglia
• Akinesia: absence of             • Tremor
  movement                         • Athetosis: slow, writhing
• Bradykinesia: abnormally           movements of the
  slow movement                      extremities & neck
• Hypokinesia: a decreased           musculature
  amount or amplitude of           • Chorea:
  movement.                          quick, repeated, involunta
• Dyskinesia:                        ry movements of distal
  involuntary, abnormal              extremity
  movement                           muscle, face, tongue, ~
Waxman, 2010                         corpus striatum
                             ERS                              37
Extrapyramidal System
   A: Basal ganglia: major     Extrapyramidal motor
   structures.
                               system:
   MD, medial dorsal; VA,
   ventral anterior; VL,           – Corpus striatum
   ventral lateral nuclei of       – Subthalamic nucleus
   thalamus                        – Substansia nigra
                                   – Red nucleus
                                   – Brain stem reticular
                                     formation
                                   – Descending spinal cord
                                     tract other than
                                     corticospinal tract
                                             (Waxman, 2010)




                        ERS                           38
Waxman, 2010




ERS          39
Adams & Victor, 2005
           Waxman, 2010




ERS                     40
Adams & Victor, 2005




ERS                  41
Adams & Victor’s, 2005
                         ERS   42
Adams & Victor’s, 2005




ERS                       43
Adams & Victor’s, 2005
ERS                  44
Incoordination & other disorders of
               Cerebellar function
        Truncal
        ataxia, drunken
        gait


  Ataxia, asynergy,
 dysmetria, dysdia
            docho-
 kinesia, intention
  tremor, rebound
              phen.

Loss of equilibrium,
nystagmus


                          Adams & Victor’s, 2005 | Waxman, 2010
                                             ERS                  45
There is a somatotopic
organization of body parts
within the cerebellar cortex.
In addition, the cerebellum
receives collateral input from
the sensory and special
sensory systems.

Waxman, 2010




                                 ERS   46
Waxman, 2010


ERS         47
Efferents from Cerebellum:
the dentatorubrothalamocortical pathway

                     Via this pathway, activity in
                     the dentate nucleus & other
                     deep cerebellar nuclei
                     modulates activity in the
                     contralateral motor cortex.
                     This crossed connection, to
                     the contralateral motor
                     cortex, helps to explain why
                     each cerebellar hemisphere
                     regulates coordination and
                     muscle tone on the
                     ipsilateral side of the body.

                     Waxman, 2010




           ERS                                 48
Waxman, 2010

Terminology
Dysmetria            Past-pointing phenomenon, unable to estimate
                     the distance involved in muscular acts  their
                     attempt to touch the object will overshoot the
                     target
Dysdiadochokinesia   Inability to perform rapidly alternating movements
Rebound phenomenon   Loss of interaction between agonist & antagonist
                     smooth muscle




                                ERS                                     49
Signs of Various Lesions of Human Motor system (Waxman, 2010)




 * Fasciculations are spontaneous, grossly visible contractions (twitches) of entire motor units
                                                     ERS                                           50
Abnormality of movement (DeJong, 2005)
Hypokinetic                                         Hyperkinetic
•   Parkinson's disease                             • Regular/predictable
•   Parkinsonian syndromes
     –   Progressive supranuclear palsy
                                                       – Tremor
     –   Multisystem atrophy                           – Hemiballism
     –   Olivopontocerebellar degeneration
         (sporadic form)
                                                       – Palatal myoclonus
     –   Striatonigral degeneration                 • Intermediate
     –   Shy-Drager syndrome                           –   Dystonia
     –   Diffuse Lewy body disease
     –   Corticobasal degeneration                     –   Myokymia
     –   Drug-induced parkinsonism                     –   Athethosis
     –   Dopa responsive dystonia
                                                       –   Tic
•   Other non-Parkinson's akinetic-rigid
    syndromes                                          –   Stereotypy
•   Huntington's disease (rigid or juvenile            –   Myorythmia
    form)                                           • Fleeting/unpredictable
•   Wilson's disease
                                                       –   Fasciculations
•   Essential tremor
•   Depression
                                                       –   Myoclonus
•   Arthritis, polymyalgia, fibromyalgia               –   Chorea
                                              ERS
                                                       –   Dyskinesias         53
54




Bradley, 2010
                ERS
55




Bradley, 2010
                ERS
Adams & Victor’s, 2005




ERS                       56
57




Bradley, 2010
                ERS
Disorder of Stance & Gait




                    Adams & Victor’s, 2005
            ERS                         58
Disorder of Stance & Gait




                      Adams & Victor’s, 2005



            ERS                        59
Bradley, 2010




ERS              60
Apraxia




http://thebrain.mcgill.ca




                                       Bradley, 2010

                            ERS                 61
Bradley, 2010




ERS            62
Bradley, 2010




ERS          63
Finally, it should be remarked once again that
  the complexity of motor activity is
     almost beyond imagination.
              Adam & Victor, 2005




                      ERS                        64

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Gangguan motorik, appetizer ;)

  • 1. Gangguan Motorik - appetizer ^^v Ersifa fatimah PPDS Neurologi RSUD Dr Soetomo – Univ. Airlangga 2013
  • 2. Referensi Motor Disturbances Disorder of Motility • Muscle • Motor paralysis • LMN • Abnormal of movement & • UMN posture due to disease of • Basal Ganglia Basal Ganglia • Cerebellum • Incoordination & other disorders of Cerebellar (Waxman, 2010) function • Tremor, Myoclonus, Focal dystonias, and Tics • Disorder of Stance & Gait (Adams & Victor’s, 2005) ERS 2
  • 3. The Motor System (DeJong, 2010) Level: Motor unit, Spinal cord, Pyramidal, Extrapyramidal Motor strength & Power Muscle Tone Muscle Volume & Contour Abnormality of Movement ERS 3
  • 4. Knowing the structure and function of the different levels of motor control, the relationships between the motor systems, and the changes in motor activity that occur in disease helps in understanding disorders of the motor system. DeJong, 2010 ERS 4
  • 5. Sensory and motor functions are interdependent in the performance of volitional movement, and it is not possible to consider the motor system apart from the sensory system. Impairment of sensation may affect all aspects of motion— volitional, reflex, postural, tonic, and phasic. DeJong, 2010 ERS 5
  • 6. Corticospinal & Corticobulbar Tracts, Composition 10% area 4 & 6 35% 55% area 3, 1, 2 Others: frontal & parietal The axons arising from the large pyramidal cells in layer V (Betz's cells) of area 4 contribute only about 5% of the fibers of the corticospinal tract and its pyramidal portion. Waxman, 2010 ERS 6
  • 7. Disorder of Motility The following parts of the nervous system are engaged primarily in the control of movement and, in the course of disease, yield a number of characteristic derangements (Adams & Victor, 2005) Large motor neurons in the anterior horns of the Paralysis due to an interruption of spinal cord & the motor nuclei of the brainstem  LMNs. the axons comprise the anterior spinal roots , the Complete lesions of LMN result in a spinal nerves & cranial nerves  innervate the loss of all movement— skeletal muscles. voluntary, automatic, postural, and The LMNs are the final common path by which all reflex. neural impulses are transmitted to muscle. Motor neurons in the frontal cortex adjacent to the Paralysis due to dysfunction of rolandic fissure connect with the spinal motor upper motor (corticospinal) neurons by a system of fibers known as the pyramidal neurons. tract. Since the motor fibers that extend from the cerebral cortex to the spinal cord are not confined to the pyramidal tract , they are more accurately designated as the corticospinal tract, or UMNs,to distinguish them from the LMNs. ERS 7
  • 8. Disorder of Motility (Adams & Victor, 2005) Several brain stem nuclei that project to the spinal cord, notably the pontine and medullary reticular nuclei, vestibular nuclei, and red nuclei. + their descending fibers  posture & movement (particularly when movement is highly automatic and repetitive) Certain of these brain stem nuclei are influenced by the motor or premotor regions of the cortex, e.g., via corticoreticulospinal relays. Two subcortical systems: the basal ganglia Involuntary movements & (striatum, pallidum, and related structures, including abnormalities of posture due to the substantia nigra and subthalamic nucleus) & the disease of the basal ganglia cerebellum Abnormalities of coordination  Play important role in the control of muscle (ataxia) due to lesions in the tone, posture, and coordination of movement by cerebellum. virtue of its connections with the corticospinal system (via thalamocortical fibers) and other descending cortical pathways ERS 8
  • 9. Disorder of Motility (Adams & Victor, 2005) Several other parts of the cerebral cortex, particularly Apraxic or nonparalytic disturbances the premotor & supplementary motor cortices. of purposive movement due to These structures are involved in the programming involvement of association (i.e., the sequencing and modulation) of voluntary pathways in the cerebrum movement. The prefrontal cortex  planning & initiation of willed movement. Fibers from the prefrontal cortex project to the supplementary & premotor cortex and provide the input to the some restrictly motor areas. Similarly, certain parietal cortical areas (superior parietal lobule) supply the somatic sensory information that activates the premotor and supplementary motor cortices and leads to directed movement. In addition, other parts of the nervous system concerned with tactile, visual, and auditory sensation are connected by fiber tracts with the motor cortex. These association pathways provide their own sensory regulation of motor function ERS 9
  • 10. Levels: • Motor Unit (LMN) • Segmental/spinal cord • Suprasegmental – Various descending systems modulate activity in segmental level – Brainstem, cerebellar, extrapyramidal, pyramidal – Psychomotor/ cortical associative Fig: The most important descending pathways that act upon the anterior horn cell of the spinal cord (deJong ERS 2010) 10
  • 11. (DeJong, 2010) • Lat ReticuloSpinal: – influence the musculature of the trunk. • Med TectoSpinal: – reflex movement – Trunk, neck, eyes ~ visual stimuli • Lat CorticoSpinal: – Hand, finger movement • RubroSpinal: – Hand, finger movement – Flexor muscle tone – Postural mechanism, standing/righting reflex • Lat VestibuloSpinal: – Postural mechanism, standing/righting reflex Mainly control trunk & proximal extremity ERS 11
  • 14. Motor Paralysis Terminology Paralysis Loss of involuntary movement due to interruption of motor pathway (cerebrum – muscle fiber) Paresis A lesser degree of paralysis / partial loss Plegia Severe / complete loss of motor function Focal ~ asymmetry Ex: hemi- Generalized ~ symmetry (although the weakness not truly general, ex.: scapuloperoneal syndrome) Truly generalized  bulbar is impaired Multifocal Ex.: bilateral CTS Non-focal Generalized, predominantly proximal, predominanly distal These various patterns have differential diagnostic and localizing significance. Identification of the process causing weakness is further aided by accompanying signs, such as reflex alterations and sensory loss. (DeJong, 2010) ERS 14
  • 15. Pattern of Paralysis & Their Diagnosis Adams & Victor, 2005 Apraxia: a state in which a clear- minded patient with no weakness, ataxia, or other extrapyramidal derangement, and no defect of the primary modes of sensation, loses the ability to execute highly complex and previously learned skills and gestures. NMJ ERS 15
  • 22. ERS 22
  • 24. ERS 24
  • 25. ERS 25
  • 26. ERS Bradley, 2010 26
  • 27. ERS 27
  • 31. Proximal, Distal & General Weakness Bradley, 2010 ERS 31
  • 32. Adams & Victor’s, 2005 ERS 32
  • 33. Features of UMN vs LMN Weakness (DeJong, 2005) + UMN LMN Weakness Corticospinal Generalized, focal, predominantly distribution distribution, hemi-, distal, predominantly proximal, para-, quadri-, mono-, No preferential involvement of faciobrachial corticopsinal innervated muscle Sensory loss Central pattern None, stocking glove, peropheral / root distribution distribution Sphincter function Sometimes impaired Normal (except for cauda equina lesion) Pain No Sometimes Other CNS sign Possibly No Corticospinal distribution: • Distal muscle • Upper ext: esp hand; wrist, finger & elbow extnsor, supinator, external rotator, abductor shoulder • Lower ext: foot & toe dorsiflexor, knee flexor, hip flexor & internal rotator, ERS 33
  • 34. Muscle Tone (DeJong, 2010) Hypotonia Hypertonia Myopathy Cerebellar Spasticity Rigidity Dystonia: disease most marked the increased tone occurs to transient or near the more or less the same degree sustained middle of the throughout the range of hypertonic range of passive motion of a limb, and is conditions that motion, more independent do not fit into apparent with of the speed of the movement the other fast than with categories slow passive Lead pipe Cogwheel Paratonia: movement smooth ratchety, jerky, increase in tone resistance tremulous in a limb throughout variation in the more or less the range hypertonia, proportional to independent due primarily the examiner's of the rate of to attempt to move. superimposed move it. tremor (Gegenhalten) ERS 35
  • 35. Muscle Volume & Contour (DeJong, 2010) Atrophy Hypertrophy Neurogenic Myogenic Disuse True Pseudo Weakness // Weakness >> Immobilization: Physiologic apparent muscle wasting wasting Wasting >> enlargement due to May be Mild-moderate weakness replacement of severe Mild-moderate diseased muscle by Recovers quickly fat and fibrous Anterior horn with resumption tissue cell  of uses Ex: Duchenne peripheral nerve UMN: Usually not followed by atrophy ERS 36
  • 36. Abnormal of movement & posture due to disease of Basal Ganglia • Akinesia: absence of • Tremor movement • Athetosis: slow, writhing • Bradykinesia: abnormally movements of the slow movement extremities & neck • Hypokinesia: a decreased musculature amount or amplitude of • Chorea: movement. quick, repeated, involunta • Dyskinesia: ry movements of distal involuntary, abnormal extremity movement muscle, face, tongue, ~ Waxman, 2010 corpus striatum ERS 37
  • 37. Extrapyramidal System A: Basal ganglia: major Extrapyramidal motor structures. system: MD, medial dorsal; VA, ventral anterior; VL, – Corpus striatum ventral lateral nuclei of – Subthalamic nucleus thalamus – Substansia nigra – Red nucleus – Brain stem reticular formation – Descending spinal cord tract other than corticospinal tract (Waxman, 2010) ERS 38
  • 39. Adams & Victor, 2005 Waxman, 2010 ERS 40
  • 40. Adams & Victor, 2005 ERS 41
  • 41. Adams & Victor’s, 2005 ERS 42
  • 42. Adams & Victor’s, 2005 ERS 43
  • 43. Adams & Victor’s, 2005 ERS 44
  • 44. Incoordination & other disorders of Cerebellar function Truncal ataxia, drunken gait Ataxia, asynergy, dysmetria, dysdia docho- kinesia, intention tremor, rebound phen. Loss of equilibrium, nystagmus Adams & Victor’s, 2005 | Waxman, 2010 ERS 45
  • 45. There is a somatotopic organization of body parts within the cerebellar cortex. In addition, the cerebellum receives collateral input from the sensory and special sensory systems. Waxman, 2010 ERS 46
  • 47. Efferents from Cerebellum: the dentatorubrothalamocortical pathway Via this pathway, activity in the dentate nucleus & other deep cerebellar nuclei modulates activity in the contralateral motor cortex. This crossed connection, to the contralateral motor cortex, helps to explain why each cerebellar hemisphere regulates coordination and muscle tone on the ipsilateral side of the body. Waxman, 2010 ERS 48
  • 48. Waxman, 2010 Terminology Dysmetria Past-pointing phenomenon, unable to estimate the distance involved in muscular acts  their attempt to touch the object will overshoot the target Dysdiadochokinesia Inability to perform rapidly alternating movements Rebound phenomenon Loss of interaction between agonist & antagonist smooth muscle ERS 49
  • 49. Signs of Various Lesions of Human Motor system (Waxman, 2010) * Fasciculations are spontaneous, grossly visible contractions (twitches) of entire motor units ERS 50
  • 50. Abnormality of movement (DeJong, 2005) Hypokinetic Hyperkinetic • Parkinson's disease • Regular/predictable • Parkinsonian syndromes – Progressive supranuclear palsy – Tremor – Multisystem atrophy – Hemiballism – Olivopontocerebellar degeneration (sporadic form) – Palatal myoclonus – Striatonigral degeneration • Intermediate – Shy-Drager syndrome – Dystonia – Diffuse Lewy body disease – Corticobasal degeneration – Myokymia – Drug-induced parkinsonism – Athethosis – Dopa responsive dystonia – Tic • Other non-Parkinson's akinetic-rigid syndromes – Stereotypy • Huntington's disease (rigid or juvenile – Myorythmia form) • Fleeting/unpredictable • Wilson's disease – Fasciculations • Essential tremor • Depression – Myoclonus • Arthritis, polymyalgia, fibromyalgia – Chorea ERS – Dyskinesias 53
  • 53. Adams & Victor’s, 2005 ERS 56
  • 55. Disorder of Stance & Gait Adams & Victor’s, 2005 ERS 58
  • 56. Disorder of Stance & Gait Adams & Victor’s, 2005 ERS 59
  • 58. Apraxia http://thebrain.mcgill.ca Bradley, 2010 ERS 61
  • 61. Finally, it should be remarked once again that the complexity of motor activity is almost beyond imagination. Adam & Victor, 2005 ERS 64

Notas del editor

  1. Control of movement in humanMovement is organized in increasingly complex and hierarchical levels. Reflexes are controlled at the spinal or higher levelsStereotypic repetitious movements, walking/swimming, are governed by neural networks that include the spinal cord, brain stem, and cerebellum… + central pattern generators, or local circuits of neurons that can trigger simple repetitive motor activities, in the lower brain stem or spinal cord. Specific, goal-directed movements are initiated at the level of the cerebral cortexA concept from Hughlings Jackson, 1858, purely onthe basis of clinical observations: Motor system is organized hierarchically in threelevels, each higher level controlling the one below.- The spinaland brain stem neurons represent the lowest, simplest, and most closely organized motorcenters;- The motor neurons of the posterior frontal region [motor cortex] represent a more complexand less closely organized second motor center;- The prefrontal parts of the cerebrum [premotor] are the third and highest motor center.Essentially correct, but Jackson failed to recognize the importance of the parietal lobe and basal ganglia in motor control.Without sensory feedback, motor control is ineffective.And at the higher cortical levels of motor control, motivation, planning, and other frontallobe activities that subserve volitional movement are always preceded and modulated by activity in the parietal sensory cortex.
  2. The psychomotor, or cortical associative, level has to do with memory, initiative, andconscious and unconscious control of motor activity that arises primarily from the motor association cortex anterior to the motor strip.
  3. Pure unilateral lesions of the corticospinal tract (ie, lesions that spare the other descending pathways) may result in relatively minor weakness, although precise movements of distal musculature (eg, movements of the individual fingers) are usually impaired. It is likely that, in these cases, descending control of motor neurons innervating proximal parts of the limbs and the trunk is mediated by the reticulospinal, vestibulospinal, and tectospinal pathways and by uncrossed axons in the anterior and lateral corticospinal tract.
  4. the ventral nuclei (ventral anterior, VA; and ventral lateral, VL) of the thalamus: receives input from the basal ganglia, cerebellum). The VA and VL thalamic nuclei complete the feedback circuit by sending axons back to the cerebral cortex
  5. Decerebrate rigidity occurs when the posterior part of the brain stem and spinal cord are isolated from the rest of the brain by injury at the superior border of the pons. In decere-brate rigidity, the extensor muscles in all of the limbs and those of the trunk and neck have increased tone. When the brain stem is transected, inhibitory influences from the cortex and basal ganglia can no longer reach the spinal cord, and fa-cilitator)' influences, which descend in the vestibulospinal and reticulospinal tracts, dominate. This results in increased activ-ity of alpha motor neurons innervating extensor muscles, which is due to increased gamma motor neuron discharge for these muscles
  6. Lihat video-nya
  7. Cari video-nyaCadenceThe beat or timing of a particular rhythmic activity—e.g., the rhythm of pedalling in cycling