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Corticospinal tract myelination Signs of motor neuron lesions • • • • • • • Paresis and paralysis Muscle atrophy Involuntary muscle contractions Abnormal muscle tone Abnormal reflexes Muscle hyperstiffness Distrurbances of movements efficiency and speed • Impaired postural control Paresis & paralysis • Common consequences of motor neuron lesion: – Paresis & paralysis – decreased ability to generate muscle force and a decrease in muscle bulk • Decreased muscle strength: – hemiplegia, paraplegia, tetraplegia • Stroke – Retain some voluntary control of hand movement via the lateral reticulospinal & tectospinal tracts. Atrophy • The loss of muscle bulk : – disuse atrophy : muscle atrophy resulting from lack of use – neurologic atrophy : muscle atrophy resulting from damage to the nervous system • In UMN lesions, – skeletal muscle continues to receive stimulation from the intact LMNs, and the rate of atrophy is slower than in LMN lesions. Involuntary muscle contractions • Muscle spasms: – sudden, involuntary contractions of muscle • Cramps: – particularly severe and painful muscle spasms • Fasciculations: – quick twitches of muscle fibers of a single motor unit that are visible on the surface of the skin. • Myoclonus: – Involuntary contractions of a muscle or group of muscles. • Fibrillations: – brief contractions of single muscle fibers not visible on the surface of the skin. • Abnormal movements generated by dysfunctional basal ganglia Abnormal muscle tone • Muscle tone: – Is defined as the stiffness (resistance to stretch) in resting muscle • Hypotonia(flaccidity) or abnormally low resistance to passive stretch: – Lower motor neuron lesions – Temporarily following an acute upper motor neuron lesion – Developmental disorders, Intracranial hemorrhage • Hypertonia or abnormally strong resistance to passive stretch: - Chronic upper motor neuron lesions - Some basal ganglia disorder • Spastic: – amount of resistance to passive movement depends on the velocity of movements • Rigidity: – resistance to passive movement remains constant, regardless of the speed of force application – Decerebrate rigidity: • Severe midbrain lesions • rigid extension of the limbs and trunk, internal rotation of the upper limbs, plantar flexion – Decorticate rigidity: • Severe lesions superior to the midbrain • upper limbs are flexed and the lower limbs are extended • Spinal or cerebral shock: – when descending motor commands are interrupted by an acute upper motor neuron lesion, the lower motor neurons affected become temporarily inactive Disorders of lower motor neurons • Lower motor neurons innervate muscle fibers – Trauma, infection (poliomyelitis), degenerative or vascular disorders, tumors can damage LMNs. • Interrupting LMN signals to muscle: – decrease or prevents muscle contraction • If the lower motor neuron cell bodies/or axons are destroyed: – – – – Loss of reflexes Atrophy Flaccid paralysis Fibrillations • Post-polio syndrome: – increasing muscle weakness, joint and muscle pain, fatigue, breathing problems Poliomyelitis: an acute infection of the anterior horn of the spinal cord Effects of polio on alpha motor neurons Healthy motor units with Normal innervation Acute polio recovery Late post-polio LMN Syndrome - Muscular Atrophy Upper motor neuron syndrome • Neurons whose axons descend from the cerebrum and brain stem to synapse on lower motor neuron (alpha and gamma) – loss of blood supply to part of the brain, spinal cord injury, cerebral palsy, multiple sclerosis, trauma • UMLs can produce several changes: – – – – – Paresis Loss of fractionation of movement Abnormal reflexes Muscle hyperstiffness Cocontraction & abnormal muscle synergies Paresis • Paresis: – consequence of inadequate recruitment of LMNs. • Stroke do not lack muscle power on the affected side weakness post stroke was due to antagonist m. contraction opposing agonist m. activity (bobath). • Decreased agonist activity was associated with inability to perform the tasks; no evidence for excessive antagonist activation was found : post stroke • Paresis following UMN lesions leads to muscle disuse, causing secondary changes in muscles and the nervous system. Loss of Fractionation of Movement • Fractionation is the ability to activate individual muscles independently of other muscles. • Interruption of lateral corticospinal signals prevents fractionation, profoundly affecting the ability to use the hand. Abnormal reflexes Changes in cutaneous reflexs Include Babinski’s sign and muscle spasm in response to normally innocuous stimuli Babinski’s test In infants until about 7months of age, Babinski’s sign is normal because the corticospinal tracts are not adequately myelinated. Muscle stretch hyperreflexia • Absence of the moderating influence of UMNs onto the LMNs cause an excessive response to muscle spindle input. • The result is excessive muscle contraction when spindles are stretched, due to the excessive firing of LMNs. • Page 203, figure 9-16. Clonus • Involuntary, repeating, rhythmic muscle contractions are called clonus. • Sustained clonus is always pathologic. Clasp-knife response • Clasp-knife response: – when a paretic muscle is slowly & passively stretched, resistance drops at a specific point in the range of motion. Muscle Hyperstiffness • Myo-plasticity: – ability of skeletal muscle to adapt structually and functionally in response to changes in activity level and to prolonged positioning • Hyperstiffness: – excessive resistance to muscle stretch (both passive and active muscle stretch) • Post stroke, paretic muscle exert excessive resistance to muscle stretch – loss of sarcomeres – increased weak binding of actin and myosin – atrophy of muscle fibers Myo-plastic Hyperstiffness Post stroke • Contracture – Sarcomeres are lost in muscles that are maintained in a shortened position, even when the nerveous system is intact – muscle shortening • Post stroke paretic muscle – Stretched, the initial, stronger resistance to stretch is produced by weak actin-myosin bonds. – The later resistence, as the stretch continues, is produced by titin. Spasticity • 2 definitions – Research definition • Increase in muscle tone due to hyper excitability of the tonic stretch reflex, characterized by a velocity-dependent increase in phasic stretch reflexes. – Clinical definition • Paresis, myoplastic hyperstiffness, cocontraction, and hyperreflexia are not distinguished. Therefore, the term spasticity is enigmatic. Cause of excessive m. stiffness • Myoplastic hyperstiffness – Denotes contracture, excess weak actin-myosin binding, and selective muscle fiber atrophy. • Hyperreflexia – Refers to muscle spindle stretch leading to overactivity in the LMNs and resulting in active muscle contraction. • Muscle overactivity – Is excessive muscle contraction caused by excessive UMN activity. Evaluation of movement impairments in chronic upper motor neuron lesions • Contracture: – decreased PROM without increased EMG output • Cocontraction: – temporal overlap of EMG activity in antagonist muscle • Hyperreflexia: – EMG activity occuring at a specific latency after the initiation of muscle stretch • Excessive upper motor neuron activity: – excessive EMG activity Abnormal timing of muscle activation • Disrupted timing of muscle activation also contributes to the movement problems in people with upper motor neuron syndrome – – – – Initiation of movement : delayed The rate of force development : slowed Muscle contraction time : prolonged The timing of activation of antagonists relative to agonist : disrupted • EMG : evaluate movements Types of upper motor neuron • • • • • • Spinal cord injury Stroke Congenital lesions (cerebral palsy) Head trauma Tumors And M.S. Spinal cord injury • In complete SCI – Stretch reflexes are hyperactive during passive movements yet during active movements stretch reflexes are the same as in people with intact nervous system • iSCI – Sig. correlation between contracture and resistance to muscle stretch. – Predominance of type 2b m. and reduction in type1 m. – Excessive stretch reflexes in the quadriceps m. during the swing phase of gait. Stroke Typical posture -of an adult who has sustained a left middle cerebral artery Stroke. Emotional lability -also called pseudobulbar affect -because emotional expression is less controlled by the corticobulbar neurons than normally Spastic Cerebral Palsy • Abnormal supraspinal influences – Failure of normal neuronal selection – Consequent aberrant muscle development lead to movement dysfunction. – Motor disorders • Paresis • Abnormal tonic stretch reflexes both at rest and during movement • Reflex irradiation • Lack of postural preparation prior to movement Common sings of UMN lesions • • • • • Paresis Abnormal cutaneous reflexes Abnormal timing of muscle activity Myoplastic hyperstiffness Hyperreflexia of the phasic stretch reflex – Clonus – Clasp-knife phenomenon Interventions for impairments secondary to upper motor neuron lesions • Improvement in function post stroke – constraint-induced movement • Timing and extent of forced use are important – – – – movements against resistance bicycling with high workloads partial body weight support gait training botulinum toxin • Treatment of hyperreflexia post SCI – Baclofen : produce inhibition in stretch reflex pathways Body weight support gait training. A harness, mounted overhead, supports part of the person’s weight while the individual walks on a treadmill. Degeneration of the voluntary motor system • Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis(ALS) : – destroys only the lateral activating tracts and anterior horn cells in the spinal cord, resulting in both upper and lower motor neuron signs – Paresis, myoplastic hyperstiffenss, hyperreflexia, Babinski’s sign, atrophy, fasciculations, fibrillations • Death : respiratory complication Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis 1. corticospinal tract (UMN) 2. lower motor neuron (LMN) * * * * * *