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6 Subject Anatomy … Done by Correction Doctor … Mohammad Al-Salim Reticulospinal Tracts (this sheet is based on the rec. from sec. 2) (from its name, begins in the reticular formation and ends in the spinal cord) The reticular formation is a set of interconnected nuclei that are located throughout the brainstem, the neurons of the reticular formation make up a complex set of networks in the core of the brainstem that extend from the upper part of the midbrain to the lower part of the medulla oblongata. (from wiki) We have to differentiate between 2 types of reticulospinal tracts, Pontine and Medullary reticulospinal tracts because they differ in their function. 1|Page Pontine reticulospinal tract -It begins in the reticular formation in the pons. -axons of reticular function neurons descend uncrossed (fibers remain on the same side) into the spinal cord and pass in the anterior white column. -Also called Medial reticulospinal tract (MRST), (in a spinal cord section it is medial while the medullary reticulospinal tract is lateral). -Tonically active We said before that the extrapyramidal tracts begin in structures in the brain stem as their names suggest however, the cortex has an influence on them so a more precise naming would be ex: cortico-reticulospinal tract and so on. The pontine tract is continuously active and the effect of the cortex on it is inhibitory, so if we remove the cortex’s influence on it, it will become hyperactive. -Function: enhances the activity of axial and proximal limb extensors (anti-gravity muscles) and inhibits the flexors in the leg (they enhance flexors in the arms) Antigravity muscles are the muscles that have to primarily work to maintain upright stance and are most important for movements such as jumps where you have to work against gravity. And they are the extensors in the leg and flexors in the arm. When you standing your joints like the knee and hip are fully extended to resist the effect of gravity to allow you to stand upright but when you set these joints are flexed. Medullary reticulospinal tracts -It begins in the reticular formation in the Medulla. - axons of RF neurons descend crossed and uncrossed into the spinal cord and pass in the lateral white column. -Also called the Lateral reticulospinal tract (LRST). - NOT tonically active Normally under stimulation from the cortex. -Function: (opposite of pontine) Inhibit the axial and proximal limb extensors and activates the flexors in the leg. 2|Page The reticulospinal tracts (specifically Medullary tracts) also have descending autonomic fibers providing a pathway by which the hypothalamus can control the sympathetic and sacral parasympathetic outflow (the fibers descending from the hypothalamus to the lateral horn are in the medullary tracts). Vestibulospinal Tract -It begins in the Vestibular nuclei which are found in the brain stem (in the pons and medulla beneath the floor of 4th ventricle). -The lateral vestibular nucleus receives afferent fibers from the inner ear through the vestibular nerve (branch of the 8th cranial nerve) and also from the cerebellum. -The fibers descend uncrossed through the medulla and through the length of the spinal cord and pass through the anterior white column and synapse with a neuron in the anterior gray column of the spinal cord. -Function: (similar to pontine reticulospinal tract) Facilitate the activity of extensor muscles and inhibit the activity of flexor muscles in association with the maintenance of balance. 3|Page Tectospinal tract Tectospinal is a descending tract while spinotectal is ascending. (the Tectum is the posterior side of the midbrain and has corpora quadrigemina or colliculi and there is 2 superior colliculi and 2 inferior) The 2 superior colliculi are related to visual reflexes and the 2 inferior are related to auditory reflexes. -The axons descend crossed and in the anterior white column close to Anterior median fissure, the majority of fibers terminate in the anterior gray column of upper cervical segments of the spinal cord. -Function: responsible for the reflex movement of head & neck in response to visual stimuli. ( لما ابوك يرمي عليك كندرة وتشوفها جاية عليك ردة فعلك انك تزيح )راسك This reflex has an afferent limb (sensory) which is visual and an efferent limb (motor) that causes you to move away, we call this visuo-spinal reflex. The motor pathways to muscles are classified into Medial Motor system: -Axial & proximal muscles (closer to the midline) like the muscles of the vertebral column and muscles of the trunk which are responsible posture. -Medial Motor system includes: 1-Anterior corticospinal tract (pyramidal tract, descends ipsilateral and crossing occurs at the level of the target spinal segment). 2-Extrapyramidal pathway in general (responsible for balance, posture …..etc) except for rubrospinal tract. 4|Page Lateral Motor system: -Distal muscles mainly, muscles of the upper and lower limb which are responsible for fine and skilled movements like writing ..etc -The lateral Motor system includes: 1-lateral corticospinal tract (pyramidal tract-85% of fibers are lateral-, crossing occurs at the lower part of medulla oblongata) 55% of the fibers of this tract end in the cervical segments because fine movements are mostly in the hand which is supplied from these segments, 20% in thoracic and 25% in sacral. 2-Rubrospinal tract (descends from the red nucleus) responsible for distal muscles of the limbs and mainly the flexors of the upper limb mainly (most fine and skilled movements are actions of flexors). Note: We divided the grey matter into 10 lamina, the anterior horn which has the cell body for motor neurons is mainly lamina 9, the medial part of the anterior horn is related to the axial muscles and the lateral part is for distal muscles, so the classification Medial motor system and Lateral motor system is related to their representation on the anterior horn. 5|Page Notes: -The lower motor neuron begins in the anterior horn and ends in the muscles. if it is damaged you lose all motor function to the muscle (peripheral nerves like radial nerve… contain lower motor neurons) -Damage or a cut to the upper motor neuron will result in exaggerated reflexes (Hyperreflexia) because usually, the effect of the cortex in general on the reflexes is inhibitory. Related to hyperreflexia is another phenomenon called hypertonia (the muscle tone increases, muscle tone is a partial state of contraction in the muscle and it is important in maintaining posture). The opposite of these effects occurs in damage to lower motor neurons because you cut all innervation to the muscle so hypotonia (muscle is flaccid) and hyporeflexia occur and eventually atrophy of the muscle occurs (no atrophy in cut to UMN). -Fasciculation (alternating contracting and relaxation in the same muscle as the twitching of the eyelid) is present in the case of LMN lesion and absent in the UMN lesion. One explanation for this is that when you cut the neuron levels of the neurotransmitter start to decrease, so the receptors on the cell membrane of the muscle are upregulated and this is thought to cause fasciculations. -Paralysis occurs in both UMN and LMN lesions however the type is different if you cut LMN the muscle becomes hypotonic and flaccid ( flaccid paralysis, the muscle is relaxed), in UMN lesion the muscle becomes hypertonic and has exaggerated reflexes so there is (spastic paralysis, the muscle is rigid\ clasp knife). -Clasp knife reaction when a clasp knife is opened “fully extended” and you try to close or open it, initially there is resistance but after reaching a specific angle or point it closes suddenly. And the same concept applies to the rigidity that happens in the patient (UMN lesion) where the patient would have flexed muscles when a doctor tries to extend the arm of the patient initially there will be resistance but if he persists and applies enough force there will be “sudden release” and the arm will extend. 6|Page Explanation of why this happens is related to the 2 phenomena: Initial resistance: Exaggerated stretch reflex (explained in the e-lecture the Dr. sent) The muscle resists stretching, when you stretch a muscle it responds by contracting and because UMN lesions cause exaggerated reflexes the effect is bigger. Sudden release: Caused by activation of Golgi tendon reflex also called anti-stretch reflex, which resists excessive contraction in the muscle (After applying pressure, the tension in the muscle will increase and will be enough to activate the Golgi tendon organs which will cause the relaxation). Ex: (pay attention to the figure above) There is a contraction in the quadriceps and this creates tension in its tendon and causes firing of the Golgi tendon organs which are sensory receptor organs, one of the reflexes that happen activates 2 interneurons in the spinal cord. The first interneuron is inhibitory, it inhibits the lower motor neuron that is going to the muscle that the signal originated from to stop it from further contracting. This reflex is polysynaptic (inhibitory interneuron between the 2 excitatory neurons). At the same time there is activation of the 2nd interneuron which is excitatory and activates the lower motor neuron that is going to the antagonist muscle (the muscle which 7|Page works in the opposite direction to the original muscle) in this example it is the hamstring, this is what’s called the law of reciprocal innervation; innervation so that the contraction of a muscle or set of muscles (as of a joint) is accompanied by the simultaneous inhibition of an antagonistic muscle or set of muscles. It is impossible to have a full contraction of the biceps and triceps at the same time because when there is a contraction in the biceps there is relaxation in the triceps and vice versa (reciprocal innervation). -Babinski sign (present in UMN lesion and not in LMN) To understand it let’s explain the normal response first, When a doctor stimulates the sole of the foot (specifically the lateral aspect) with a blunt object, the normal response is flexion of the toes but in cases of UMN lesions what occurs is the opposite (called Babinski sign), when stimulating the sole of the foot what occurs is fanning of the toes, and the big toe is dorsiflexed rather than being flexed and this is suggestive of UMN lesion. Note: Upper motor neuron lesions most of the time affect both pyramidal and extrapyramidal tracts, it is rare that only one of them is affected, however, the explanation to most of the phenomenon that happens (clasp knife, hypertonia…etc) is related to the extrapyramidal tract except Babinski sign which is explained by pyramidal tract. Note: in children below the age of 1-1.5 years, positive Babinski sign is normal because full development and myelination of the pyramidal tracts happen after 1-1.5 years of age (when the child stops crawling on 4 limbs and starts standing and moving on 2). 8|Page -Clonus (another symptom of UMN lesion, not LMN) In testing for clonus the doctor would attempt to dorsiflex the foot and would face resistance (remember what we said above) and when he applies enough force clonus happens which is rhythmic contractions and relaxation of muscles when they are subjected to sudden sustained stretch caused by exaggerated reflexes. -Both Decerebrate and Decorticate rigidity are related to UMN lesions, the difference between them is the level of the lesion if the lesion is higher than the red nucleus it’s decorticate if the lesion was lower it’s decerebrate. 9|Page The midbrain (will be discussed next week) is divided into two levels, level of superior colliculus and level of the inferior colliculus, at the superior level there is a structure called the red nucleus (from which the rubrospinal tract descends) a lesion above this nucleus is called decorticate and below it is decerebrate. In decorticate there is rigidity in the entire body and the lower limbs are extended while upper limbs are flexed and rigid, in decerebrate, there is also complete rigidity and the lower limbs extended but the upper limbs are extended as well. Decorticate posture (lesion above red nucleus so you affected\removed the cortex, from the name), remember what we said above about the pontine reticulospinal tract and that it is tonically active and removing the cortex causes more activation so its effect is overriding and more prominent and it causes activation of extensors in the leg and flexors in the arm (antigravity muscles) Decerebrate posture (lesion below the red nucleus) the rubrospinal tract is part of the lateral motor system and is responsible for the flexion of muscles in upper limbs so if it is lost there will be an extension of the upper and lower limbs. The vital centers (related to CVS and RS) are present in the medulla oblongata and pons (lower part of the brain stem) so a brain stem injury is fatal, if you lose part of the cortex you lose some functions but brain stem injury is fatal, that is why decerebrate is worse than decorticate because the lesion is closer to the vital centers so prognosis is worse. -Clinical significance of lamination of the ascending tracts In the posterior column system, the fibers closer to the midline are related to the lower part of the body (sacral) and the cervical is most lateral, but in the spinothalamic tracts, the cervical to sacral segments are located medial to lateral because the crossing of the fibers occurred in the spinothalamic tract. If the lesion started on the inside and moved to the outside (we call it intramedullary tumor) the first affected fibers in the spinothalamic tract are the cervical and upper part of the body, If the lesion is extramedullary like meningiomas the first affected fibers are sacral. Sacral sparing (sacral fibers are not affected) occurs in intramedullary lesions because the lesion typically doesn’t reach the sacral fibers. 10 | P a g e