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Somatosensory & Motor Systems • The Reflex Arc • Hierarchy, Somatotopy and Functional Segregation • Somatosensory Syndromes – – – – Hemianesthesia Thalamic Pain Asterognosia Gerstmann Syndrome • Motor Syndromes – – – – Hemiplegia/Hemiparesis Apraxia Ataxia Basal Ganglia Disorders The reflex arc • Neurons carry a message from stimulated receptors to the correct effectors • A sensory neuron carries the message from the receptor to the CNS • A motor neuron carries the message from the CNS to the effector. Knee-jerk Reflex • Simple stimulusresponse • ‘Closed loop’ (not influenced by other input) The reflex arc • In most reflex arcs the sensory neuron connects to motor neurons through association neurons (interneurons) in the CNS. • Interneurons make the correct connection between the sensory neuron and the motor neuron (integration) Cortico-Spinal Inhibition via Interneurons • • Interneurons provide descending input from outside the ‘closed loop’ Permit modulation (fine tuning) of ‘all-or-none’response of competing flexor-extensor muscles The Central Nervous System is Just One Big Interneuron Afferent Pathways Efferent Pathways Hierarchical Organization • Sensory system – lower level features are integrated into higher level ‘objects’ – objects & self are integrated into meaningful environmental ‘scene’ • Motor system – ‘goal’ is subdivided into ‘subroutines’ – ‘subroutines’ are expressed as coordinated sequence of individual muscle movements • Sensori-motor ‘cross-talk’ ensures smooth execution of movement, based on continuous sensory updates General Motors and the Central Nervous System Sensory System As ‘Market Research’ Self in Relation to Objects in Environment (Tertiary Sensory) Objects in Environment (Secondary Sensory) Safe Object Features (Primary Sensory) Marketable Car Headlights Bright Engine Style Speed Dashboard Power Economy Style Info. General Motors and the Central Nervous System Motor System As ‘Production’ Dorsolateral Pre-Frontal Cortex Secondary Motor Ass. Cortex Primary Motor Cortex Overall Design Headlight Design Bulb Basal Ganglia Cerebellum Cover Reflector Headlight Engine Design Axle Piston Engine Car Dashboard Design Valve Meter Lights Dashboard Somatosensory & Motor Disorders • Reflect breakdown at different levels of the – sensory hierarchy • primary sensation • integration of sensations into percepts • integration of percepts into ‘environments’ – motor hierarchy • primary motor movement • skilled movements • initiation, coordination and cessation of skilled movements for goal directed behavior • Pathognomonic sign – a sign whose presence means that a particular disease is present beyond any doubt • lateralized deficit in species-wide, normative behavior always associated with lateralized and localized pathology Somatopic Organization of Tactile Perception Somatopic Organization of Tactile Perception • Somatosensory Homunculus Functional Segregation • Somatic sensation is functionally segregated at level of spinal cord Cross here Cross here Somatosensory Disorders • Hemianesthesia (primary sensory loss) – – inability to register tactile information – Test – sensory threshold (light touch, pinprick, heat/cold, limb movement) – Location of lesion • anywhere from peripheral nerve to post-central gyrus • Loss at dermatome reveals level of injury in spine • Modality dissociation (hapsis/proprioception vs. pain/temperature) indicates hemi-spinal cord lesion ipsilateral to side that lost hapsis/proprioception Higher-Level Somatosensory Disorders • Thalamic Pain – – initial hemianesthesia, later hypersensitivity – ‘knife-like’, ‘burning’, ‘crushing’ – increased by light touch, change in temperature or other sensory/affective stimuli (music, fear, anger) – Location of lesion – posterolateral thalamus • Astereognosia/Graphesthesia – Failure to recognize palpated objects in presence of intact hapsis and feature identification – Test – recognize different coins by feel, fingertip-numberwriting – Location of lesion – contralateral parietal association cortex Multi-modal Sensory-Integration Deficit • Gerstmann Syndrome – Extremely rare – ‘Gerstmann tetrad’ • Right-left confusion • Finger agnosia • Dysgraphia (difficulty with writing) • Dyscalculia (difficulty with calculations) – Isolated cases due to small strokes near junction of left parietal (body schema) and temporal (symbol meaning) association cortex Lateralized and Crossed Motor Organization • Guided limb movements of most interest to neuropsychologists • Lower motor neurons (LMNs) synapse ipsilaterally • 90% of upper motor neurons (UMNs) cross at level of medulla (pyramids) Cross here Upper Motor Neurons Lower Motor Neuron Somatopic Organization of Motor Function • Motor Homunculus Simple Motor Disorders • Hemiparesis/hemiplegia – difficulty/inability to move limb – Test – grip/leg strength – Location of lesion – anywhere along cortico-spinal tract • if spinal cord lesion, deficit is ipsilateral to lesion • if supra-medullary lesion, deficit is contralateral to lesion Symptom Lower Motor Neuron Upper Motor Neuron Flaccid Spastic Yes No Reflexes Absent Hyperactive Babinski sign Absent Present Muscle Tone Muscle Atrophy Higher Cortical Motor Disorders • Apraxia – Inability to perform skilled movement in presence of preserved single muscle group movements and muscle strength – Test – imitate/carry out gestures, use objects • Inability to imitate/differentiate gestures (salute, blow a kiss) • Inability to carry out action to command (answer phone) • Inappropriate use of object (comb hair with screwdriver) • Incorrect sequencing of movements (mailing a letter) – Cognitive mechanisms and subtypes are still debated – Location of lesion – left hemisphere (supplementary motor, inferior parietal lobe), corpus callosum Disorders of Coordinated Movements • Ataxia – Inability to coordinate goal-directed movements in presence of preserved muscle strength and appropriate motor programs – Test – finger-to-nose pointing, heel-to-shin, heel-to-toe walk, Grooved Pegboard – Location of lesion – cerebellum (motor coordination) or dorsal columns (proprioception) Basal Ganglia Lateral View Anterior view a. b. Coronal View a. b. a. Caudate Striatum b. Putamen c. Globus pallidus c. Caudate Globus Pallidus Ventral View Putamen Axial View Basal Ganglia Disorders • Normally inhibits excitatory input from thalamus to motor cortex • Regulate initiation, termination and modulation of movements Condition Signs/Symptoms Etiology Pathology Parkinson’s Disease Resting tremor, slowed movement, muscle rigidity Unknown genetic & environmental interactions Late Degeneration of Substantia Nigra Huntington’s Disease Chorea (writhing movements), psychiatric symptoms Known autosomal dominant mutation Early Degeneration of Caudate Nucleus Motor Function Tests • Grip Strength – simple motor strength – Sensitive to dysfunction of primary motor pathways • Finger Tapping – rapid rhythmic movements – sensitive to deficits in smooth execution of movements d/t frontal, subcortical or cerebellar dysfunction Grooved Pegboard • Sensitive to motor deficits at different levels in the hierarchy – Primary motor – weakness/slowing/poor grip – Cerebellum - incoordination – Parietal lobe – mis-orientation of pegs (failure to integrate visual and tactile information)