Where do alpa motor neurons live?
• Cell bodies reside in the ventral horn of the spinal cord and brainstem cranial motor nuclei
What are the higher motor centers in the cortex and brainstem?
• Vestibular nucleus ○ Anticipatory motor control • Reticular formation ○ Rhythmic motor output (locomotion) • Superior colliculus ○ Eye movements • Motor cortex ○ voluntary motor control
What does the cerebellum act as (general)?
* Computes short and long-term (learned) corrections to the errors in the circuits from the other motor systems
What role (general) does the basal ganglia play?
• Roles in movement initiation and action selection as well as roles in motor learning, reinforcement, motivated behavior
Alpha motor neurons (LMNs) in the ventral horn of the spinal cord are organized somatotopically. What does that mean?
What is the definition of a motor unit?
• Alpha motor neuron and the muscle fibers it innervates
How does the gradual recruitment of force help you hold an egg?
• The fact that smaller alpha motor neurons innervate smaller motor units allows the nervous system to recruit less movement for a given task
• Gradients from small to large motor units exist, generating graded forces
• They can be recruited systematically by higher motor centers, resulting in a gradual increase in force
*to grip a fragile object you recruit the smaller motor units
Describe the physiology of graded motor unit recruitment
What are the three basic types of muscle fibers that differ in fatigability?
• Tonic muscle fibers
○ Super low fatigability, mostly in spindles and in extraocular muscles
○ Generate isometric tension, shorten very slowly
• Slow twitch muscle fibers
○ Low fatigability with lots of myoglobin and mitochondria
• Fast twitch oxidative fibers
○ Activate quickly and have lots of mitochondria so fatigue moderately slowly
• Fast twitch glycolytic fibers
○ Activate quickly
○ Fatigue rapidly as they rely on anaerobic glycolysis ATP generation
○ Less mitochondria
The size principle of motor neurons matches up how with the type of muscle fibers?
What is a muscle spindle?
• Technically, a muscle spindle is a speciaal type of muscle fiber
○ Intrafusal muscle fiber
• Run in parallel with the main extrafusal muscle fiber
• Stretch of the muscle spindle is communicated to the spinal cord through group Ia and II sensory afferents
○ Large, fast axons that have the modality of stretch
• Ia sensory afferents contact alpha motor neurons in spinal cord and form the DTRs or stretch reflexes
• Remember that muscle spindles are contractile
What motor neurons innervate muscle spindle cells?
What is the GTO?
Describe the neuronal process behind the patellar tendon DTR
• Hammer tap stretches the muscle
• Stimulates activity in the Ia sensory axons (fast and fat)
• This reports the stretch of muscle spindles to both cortex and the relay to alpha motor neurons in the spinal cord that contract the stretched muscle
○ Synergist muscle
• Considered monosynaptic but the Ia spindle afferents branch and diverge in the spinal cord to contact large populations of motor neurons which innervate populations of muscle fibers to create the reflex motion
• Thus it produces large contraction and maintains faitfulness by not depending on one or a few neurons
Besides contraction of the synergist muscle, what muscles are coordinated to act by the type Ia afferents in the reflex arc?
What is flexor-extensor coupling?
How does Guillan-barre mess with muscle action?
• Peripheral motor nerve acute demyelination
What is the normal function of the neuronal circuit tested in DTRs?
How does Lambert-eaton syndrome mess with muscle action?
• NMJ destruction by immunological attack of peripheral nerve Ca channels
Describe the native firing rate of the type Ia afferents
• These innervate the spindle muscle fibers (intrafusal)
• Maintain a low, but non-zero firing rate at baseline
• Passive stretch and shortening are discerned as increased or decreased frequency of the type Ia afferent AP
○ Increase = stretch
Using a heavy box as an example, how do the gamma and alpha motor neurons result in a coordinated error correction reflex?
Type Ia sensory afferents direclty contact which motor neurons?
How does the crossed extension reflex work?
What are CPGs?