Motor Neuron Lesions
what age do most infants with type 1 wernig hoffman die
2
clinical signs of __________ will occur later in the disease
LMN
if ALS progresses superiorly from cervical level
LMN of phrenic nerve will be effected, comprising respiration
trasection will cause loss of
bowel and bladder control
what is another name for hemisection
brown sequard syndrome
lateral hemisection of the cord due to
bullet or knife injury
where does syringomyelia occur ?
central cavitation of the spinal cord, usually in the cervical region with a glial reaction, adjacent to the cavity (gliosiasastryocytes hypertrophy, multiply, and may become phagocytic)
what virus is MS associated with?
epstein bar viruses
lesions of upper motor neurons may have hyper stiffness- what is this
excessive resistance to both passive and active muscle stretch
why do lesions of upper motor neurons lead to spastic paresis?
inadequate recruitment of LMN
lesions of lower motor neurons: Werdnig Hoffman disease
infantile spinal muscular atrophies (SMAs)
where do cavitation and gloss spread in syringomyelia?
into the gray matter and white matters well as longitudinally leading to variable signs and symptoms depending on the regions involved
lesions of lower motor neurons: fibrillations
invisible brief electrical potentials detected by electromyography
lesions of the posterior column effect __________ and begin immediately ____________ the level of the lesion
ipsilateral immediately below
if the ventral horn is effected in hemisection
ipsilateral flaccid paralysis of innervated muscle
if dorsal column are effected in hemisection
ipsilateral loss of tactile discrimination, position sensation and vibration sensation
if lateral corticospinal tract are effected in hemisection
ipsilateral spastic paresis with pyramidal signs below the lesion
lesions of the posterior columns: tabes dorsalis is _______involvement of the ___________ root which results in _________ and __________
irriative dorsal pain and paresthesias
in syringomelia the central canal gets
larger
Lesions of posterior column: how are lesions in MS?
lesions are random and asymmetric
below the level of the lesion
lose corticospinal = ipsilateral (UMN) lose lateral spinothalamic = contralateral (pain and temp) lose dorsal columns = ipsilateral (fine touch, position and vibration sense)
lesions of lower motor neurons: poliomyelitis
loss of LMNs in the ventral horn caused by the polio virus
lesions of the posterior column result in
loss of joint position sensation, vibratory and pressure sensation, and 2 point discrimination
lesions of the posterior column: tabes dorsalis is characterized by
loss of tactile discrimination and positions and vibration sensation
lesions of lower motor neurons: flacidity
low muscle tone
ALS begins in _________ of the cord that supples the upper limb
lower cervical segment (40%)
at the level of lesion we will see
lower motor neuron sign
spinal shock will present
lower motor neuron signs
the first signs of transection look like
lower motor neuron- spinal shock
ALS begins in ________________ that supply the lower limb
lumbosacral segment (40%)
Is ALS more common in males of females
males 3:2
lesions of the posterior column: multiple sclerosis leads to what sensory issues
may have numbness, parasthesias, lehrmitte's sign
lesions of upper motor neurons are not effecting __________ directly but are a dysfunction of _______________ or ______________
motor neurons descending motor control motor neurons (ex-brain lesion)
Lesions of the posterior column: if multiple sclerosis effects the descending motor tracts we will see
muscle weakness
example of superficial reflexes: abdominal wall stroked
musculature contracts and umbilicus deviates to side of stimulus
what is syringomyelia?
neuronal degeneration that is not a primary pathalogical change
lesions of the posterior column: tabes dorsalis is seen in patients with
neurosyphilis
in transection will bowel and bladder control return
no
in ALS at the level of the lesion in muscles
of the upper limbs and bilateral spastic weakness (UMN sign) below the lesion in muscles of lower limb
If lesion of upper motor neuron is below decussation of pyramids
paresis is ipsilateral and below the level of the lesion
principal causative factor is vitamin b12 deficiency and is typically encountered in association with
pernicious anemia (treatment is injections)
lesions of the posterior column: what is involved in multiple sclerosis
plaques involve mostly the white matter of the cervical segment of the spinal cord
lesions in subacute combined degeneration result in loss of
senses of position, descriminative touch and vibration
patients with ALS at caudal brainstem levels may have difficulty
swallowing and difficulty speaking
Example of Posterior column lesion
tabes dorsalis
below level of lesion
upper motor neuron signs
later (after swelling, edema, hemmorrhage is gone) it looks like
upper motor neuron syndrome
thrombosis or occlusion of anterior spinal artery: what areas are supplied by this artery
ventral and lateral funiculi, most of gray matter
subacute combined degeneration is also called
vitamin B12 neuropathy
syringomyelia: spreading of the cavitation and glial reaction into the lateral funiculi may result in
voluntary paresis of upper motor neuron type, affecting especially the lower limbs
lesions of lower motor neurons results in absence of ____________ or ___________ contraction of ___________ muscle
voluntary, relex, denervated muscle (paralyzed)
why do parties with ALS at caudal brainstem have difficulty swallowing and speaking
weakness of pharyngeal or tongue muscles intreated by cranial nerves IX and XII
lesions of the posterior column: what are the signs of multiple sclerosis
weakness, incoordination, scanning speech (halting monosyllabic), involuntary oscillation of eyeballs, coarse tremor
is wernig- Hoffman disease hereditary?
yes
what is the classical clinical picture of syringomyelia?
yoke like anesthesia for pain and temperature over the shoulder and upper limbs accompanied by lower motor neuron (ventral gray) weakness and consequent wasting of the muscles of the upper limbs
if lesion occurs between C1 and C3
Respiration stops
Lesions of posterior column: MS appears to be an ______________ disorder
autoimmune
what kind of hereditary is wernig hoffman disease
autosomal recessive
lesions of lower motor neurons result in _________ at what location?
flaccid paralysis ipsilateral to and at the level of lesion
how to test for hoffmans sign
flicking nail of patients middle finger
example of lesion of the posterior column
multiple scerosis
what is typical cause of death in ALS
respiratory complications
how is lesions of posterior column typically evaluated
testing vibratory sense using a 128--Hz tuning fork
lesions of upper motor neurons have loss of fractionation of movement: what is this?
ability to activate muscles separately from others
lesions of the posterior column: patients with a romberg sign show
abnormal unsteadiness is noted wie the patient stands with feet together and the eyes closed, thereby evaluating proprioception in the lower limbs
onset of symptoms is _______ and is often accompanied by _______________
abrupt severe pain- sudden and severe caudally radiating back pain
what does ALS effect?
affecting corticospinal tracts along with cranial nerves and ventral horn motor cells
Lesions of lower motor neuron effects _______ or is ___________ en route to _______________
alpha motor neuron, peripheral motor axon, skeletal muscle
lesions of the posterior column: what is paresthesias
an unusual sensation such as burning, tingling, or numbness
how to test for altered cutaneous reflex
babinski sign
why will bladder control not return
because parasympathetic motor fibers travel on corticospinal to S2-S4 (which was cut with voluntary motor fibers in corticospinal tract)
accompanying spastic paraplegia results from
bilateral corticospinal tract invilvement (UMN, both sides, everything below the level of the lesion)
in ALS cervical levels experience
bilateral flaccid weakness (LMN signs)
what can subacute combined degeneration lead to
bilateral spastic paralysis with upper motor neuron signs (dorsolateral funiculus contains lateral corticospinal tracts)
ALS is (bilateral/unilateral) and (reginerative/ degenerative)
bilateral, degenerative
where are demylination and loss of nerve fibers in subacute combined degeneration
bilaterally in the dorsal and dorsolateral funiculi
if the lateral spinothalamic tract are effected in hemisection
contralateral loss of pain and temperature sensation beginning one segment below the lesion
ALS effects LMN in ______________
cranial nerves
if there is an upper motor neuron lesion may have altered _______ reflex
cutaneous
in syringomyelia what is interrupted early in the disease and causes a burn that is not painful
decussating fibers for pain and temperature in the ventral white commissar (lateral spinothal)
lesions of lower motor neurons: Werdnig Hoffman disease leads to (3)
destruction of LMNs in infants or young children infants may have difficulty sucking, swallowing, or breathing weakness in the limbs (floppy baby)
bilateral atrophy, fasiculation, flaccid paraysis, hypo/areflexia at the level of the lesion because
destruction of the anterior horn cells
what is the primary area affected in subacute combined degeneration
dorsal and dorsal lateral column
lesions of upper motor neurons lead to __________ or _______ muscle stretch reflex due to ________________
elevated or hyperactive inhibition of gamma motor neurons
what (4) things may lesions of upper motor neurons lead to?
elevated or hyperactive stretch muscle reflex may have clonus loss of fractionation of movement hyperstiffness
lesions of the posterior column: multiple sclerosis is a loss of ________________ which is replaced by ________________
fatty myelin sheath scar tissue
how is gait in subacute combined degeneration and why?
gait is ataxic (without coordination) because the patient is unaware of the position of the leg (because spinocerebellar tract travels in posterior column)
ALS releases _________ (neurotransmiter) and causes ____________
glutamate excitotoxicity
at the level of the lesion in hemisection
have segmental signs on same side
if there is an upper motor lesion my have ___________ sign
hoffmans
usually lose _________ and _____________ sense beginning _________________ _____________ the lesion because of
pain and temperature 1-2 segments below bilateral lateral spinothalmic tract damage
If lesion of upper motor neuron is above the decussation of pyramids
paresis is contralateral and below level of lesion)
lesions of the posterior column: if multiple sclerosis affects the posterior column we will see
posterior column signs
positive hoffmans test would show
prompt adduction of thumb and flexion of the index finger
lesions of UMN and LMN: ALS is what kind of disease
pure motor system disease
lesions of the posterior column: multiple sclerosis lesions are
random and asymmetric
lesions of lower motor neurons: fasicilations
randoms twitches of denervated motor units beneath the skin
lesions of upper motor neurons may have clonus: what is this?
rapid successive reflex contractions and relaxations (rhythmic)of agonists observed mainly at the knee and ankle joints during reflex testing
immediately following a trascection of the spinal cord
sensation and all voluntary movement are lost below the level of the lesion
Lesions of lower motor neurons: post polio syndrome
some of motor neurons that were not destroyed create extra branches- as we age they are unable to support extra branches so neuron dies
what does transection look like upper motor neuron syndrome
spastic paralysis below the level of the region, hyperflexia
what does a lesion of upper motor neurons lead to
spastic paresis
types of upper motor neuron lesions
spinal cord injury, stroke, congenital lesions, may also include head trauma, tumors, spastic CP, and MS
lesions of lower motor neuron leads to absence of suppressed muscle ________________
stretch reflex (hyporeflexia, areflexia, hypotonicity
lesions of upper motor neurons: cremaster relex
stroke inner thigh of male, testicle elevated on side of stimulus
how to conduct babinski test
stroke sole of foot- toes should curl if normal
superficial reflexes
stroking certain areas of the skin may be absent in UML
in syringomyelia the cavitation and glial reaction spread into
the lateral funiculi (lateral corticospinal)
only effecting the neurons where
the lesions are happening
where is thrombosis most common
thoracic region
what does a positive babinski test look like
toes should flare (bad) less than 7 months old (normal)
typical lifespan of ALS
typically dies within 3 years of diagnosis
lesions of the posterior column: what is the cause of multiple sclerosis
unknown
transection: quadriplegia/tetraplegia
upper cervical cord; paraplegic b/w cervical and lumbosacral segments