Title: Motor Disorders
1Motor Disorders
- Motor disorders affect either the cell body of
the motor neuron in the CNS, the axon of the
motor neuron that runs into the PNS, the
neuromuscular junction, and or muscle cells. - Disorders are distinguished based on symptoms and
which of these components is affected.
2Motor Disorders
- Disorders are further distinguished based on
being disorders of upper motor neurons, motor
neurons wholly in the brain and which synapse on
lower motor neurons. - Other disorders are of lower motor neurons,
neurons of the lower brain and or spinal cord
which extend axons into the PNS and synapse on
muscle.
3Motor Disorders
- Classified as neurogenic diseases or neuropathies
that either affect the motor neuron cell bodies
vs. those that affect peripheral axons
(peripheral neuropathies) produce little
degeneration of muscles. - Myopathic diseases involve degeneration and
wasting away of muscle fibers with little change
in neurons or axons.
4Signs of Disorder
- Deep tendon reflexes (DTRs) such as the knee jerk
are normally uniform in all limbs with disorders
their activity, symmetry or both will be altered. - In general, CNS damage results in hyperactive
DTRs whereas with peripheral damage, DTRs are
hypoactive.
5Pathological Reflexes
- Pathological reflexes, a common sign of CNS
damage is the Babinski sign, a reflex normally
not seen in individuals over age one. In normal
cases over age one, stimulation of the sole of
the foot produces a flexion of the big toe
downward. With brain or spinal cord damage, the
same stimulation produces an extension of the big
toe, it moves upward, termed the Babinski sign.
Babinski signs are termed present or elicited but
not positive or negative
6Signs
- Upper motor neuron signs include, paresis
(mild/moderate weakness) with muscle spasticity,
hyeractive DTRs, Babinski sign - Lower motor neuron signs include paresis with
muscle flaccidity, no Babinski sign
7Tremors
- A simple involuntary movement consisting of a
rhythymic, oscillations of a body part about a
fixed point, can occur in any part of the body
served by skeletal muscles.
8Types of Tremors
- Normal physiological at-rest tremor, a product of
mechanical effects arising from the beating of
the heart. - Normal physiological action or postural tremor,
also some input from beating heart,
synchronization tendencies of spinal reflexes,
mechanical springiness of muscles, tendons, etc.,
interactions between firing patterns of
antagonistic muscles maintaining a posture
9Essential Tremor
- A tremor that often occurs in families as a
autosomal dominant trait. Frequency ranges from
4-9 Hz, may occur in childhood or only later in
life and typically runs a slowly progressing
course. - Usually postural but in some it increases with
kinetic movement, rarely persists at rest, most
commonly occurs in distal upper extremities,
individual fingers may be affected
10Essential Tremor
- The head can be affected, vocal tract likewise
which can give a wavering quality to the voice. - Essential tremor interferes with daily activities
such as shaving, drinking from a cup, using
utensils alcohol is very effective at
suppressing essential tremor but it worsens when
the alcohol wears off.
11Intention Tremor
- In reaching for an object, the persons reach
stops too soon or too late as they undershoot and
overshoot the target, back and forth several
times until they can eventually put their hand on
the target object. - Indicative of damage to the cerebellum
12Parkinsons Disease
- Parkinsons disease (PD) involves muscle
rigidity, resting tremor, slowed laborious
movements. - The muscle rigidity is seen in a movement of a
limb which moves stiffly and rigidly and then
gives way abruptly, termed cog-wheel rigidity.
The person has a mask-like face and a staring
expression. With the rigidity the person has an
inability to initiate a movement, termed
akinesia. Once a movement is initiated, the
person has difficulty shifting to another
movement. - The person may only be able to initiate a
movement under idiosyncratic stimulus conditions,
such as only being able to take a step if a
barrier is placed in front of the patients
foot.. The rigidity of the muscles in the hands
may cause the persons handwriting to become
smaller and smaller termed micrographia.
13Parkinsons Disease
- Pill rolling tremor or tremor at rest with
frequency of 3 to 7 Hz. - Tremor disappears or diminishes with the
initiation of a movement but later on in the
condition may return with a maintained posture
14Parkinsons Disease
- The afflicted person often cannot extend their
arms to break a fall or adjust their posture to
avoid a fall, hence postural instability is a
major symptom. - The tremors are seen in a limb at rest which will
diminish somewhat as the limb is moved, hence, a
resting tremor is said to be present in the
limbs. In the hands, the tremor often takes the
form of the thumb rolling over the first two
fingers as if the person were rolling a pencil or
a pill back and forth in their hand, or this is
termed the pill-rolling tremor. The persons
head or lower lip will also show the tremor.
15Parkinsons Disease
The motoric symptoms of Parkinsons are
sometimes termed T tremors R rigidity A
akinesia P postural instability Parkinsons is an
example of hypokinetic symptoms, a feature of
basal ganglia disorders. Basal ganglia disorders
typically involve either inhibition of voluntary
movements or the initiation of involuntary
movements
16Parkinsons Disease
Early non-motor symptoms include Up to 40 have
subjective somatosensory complaints including
pain, tingling, numbness or burning in body
areas prior to TRAP. Up to 75-90 have a
significant reduction in olfactory acuity or
hyposmia. Later non-motor symptoms include 1 in
4 become demented
17Parkinsons Disease
- Stage One
- 1.Signs and symptoms on one side only
- 2.Symptoms mild
- 3.Symptoms inconvenient but not disabling
- 4.Usually presents with tremor of one limb
- 5.Friends have noticed changes in posture,
- locomotion and facial expression
- Stage Two
- 1.Symptoms are bilateral
- 2.Minimal disability
- 3.Posture and gait affected
- Stage Three
- 1.Significant slowing of body movements
- 2.Early impairment of equilibrium on walking
or standing - 3.Generalized dysfunction that is moderately
severe -
18- Stage Four
- 1.Severe symptoms
- 2.Can still walk to a limited extent
- 3.Rigidity and bradykinesia
- 4.No longer able to live alone
- 5.Tremor may be less than earlier stages
- Stage Five
- 1.Invalidism complete
- 2.Cannot stand or walk
- 3.Requires constant nursing care
19Huntingtons Disease
Huntingtons disease (HD) involves
uncontrollable, jerky movements of the limbs
also known as Huntingtons chorea, from a Greek
word for dance but think of slam dancing to
properly envision Huntingtons. The movements
consist of chorea, sudden movements of the limbs
which can be violent and dramatic. Athetosis or
slow sinuous, writhing movements, especially
severe in the hands performed involuntarily, an
inability to to sustain the fingers, toes, tongue
or other group of muscles in any one position,
resulting in grotesque changing postures A
disorder of hyperkinetic symptoms of the basal
ganglia
20- Symptoms
- - onset is insidious
- - psychiatric disturbances, personality changes
of apathy irritability to full-blown
manic-depressive or schizophreniform illness - - psychiatric disturbance preceding or
concomitant with movement disorder - - motor manifestations include flicking movements
of the extremities, lilting gait, and motor - impersistence (inability to
- sustain a motor act)
- - facial grimacing, ataxia, and
- dystonia may also appear
21Tourettes Syndrome
- Tics of the limbs, face and head, and involuntary
vocalizations, usually simple vocal tics such as
inarticulate sounds, complex vocal tics can be
the involuntary and compulsive utterances of
obscenities (copralalia) performing obscene
gestures (coprapraxia) or the intrusion of
obscene thoughts (mental copralalia , animal
sounds, repeating the utterances of others,
possibly imitating the actions of others such
facial expressions, but in extreme caricature. - A basal ganglia disorder of hyperkinetic symptoms
22Multiple Sclerosis
- Multiple sclerosis (or MS) is an autoimmune
disorder in which immune system cells in the CNS
attack and breakdown myelin on CNS axons. - A myelinated axon stripped of its myelin ceases
to function. As the loss of myelin progresses,
loss of sensory and motor functions result, with
the loss of motor functions being more dramatic
and obvious. - The symptoms may be sporadic with remissions and
periods of improvement but the person inevitably
declines. MS is fatal.
23- MS
- - progressive disease of CNS myelin
- - onset in early adulthood
- - gradual destruction of myelin sheaths
- - accompanying development of hard scar tissue
(sclerosis) - - occasional (and sometimes long-lasting)
remissions - - thought to result from autoimmune dysfunction.
- Symptoms in advanced MS
- - muscular weakness, tremor,
- urinary incontinence, numbness
- visual disturbances, ataxia (loss of
- motor coordination)
24Myasthenia Gravis
- Severe muscle weakness and eventual paralysis,
thought to be due to an autoimmune disorder of
the acetycholine receptor at the neuromuscular
junction, prevents muscle fibers from
depolarizing. Most patients have antibodies for
the ACh receptor - May begin in the occular muscles, severe drooping
of the eyelids, (ptosis) and double vision
(diplopia), progresses to more and more muscle
weakness, nasal speech, difficulty in swallowing
and articulation
25MG
- Symptoms are progressive with fatigue but
interspersed with periods of no symptoms or
apparent recovery of abilities and then symptoms
reappear. Symptoms much better after sleep or
rest. If physical exerted or stressed symptoms
much worse. - Visible symptoms include fasciculations, visible
twitches of muscle, seen as moving ripples under
the skin occur in a single motor unit, result
from involuntary but synchronous contractions of
enervated muscle fibers, characteristic of
degenerative motor neuron conditions
26MG
- 90 of patients first complain of diplopia or
ptosis may grimace when smiling due to weakness
of facial muscles. - During sustained upward gaze, occular weakness
becomes apparent in a lengthy conversation
speech becomes more and more nasal sounding - In moderately advanced cases, neck shoulder and
respiratory become weak, in severe cases apnea
develops and quadriplegia renders the person
locked in
27Apraxia is the inability to perform movements in
response to commands and results from
disconnection or destruction of dominant
hemisphere association areas
28- Apraxia is divided into various types ideomotor,
ideational, limb-kinetic, constructional, ocular,
gait and dressing. Ideomotor (motor) apraxia is
the principal form and is often referred to
simply as apraxia. - Ideomotor apraxia may involve buccofacial, limb
or truncal (axial) musculature.
29- Buccofacial apraxia is tested by asking the
patient to imitate various motor acts, including
Blow out a match, Drink with a straw, or
Stick out your tongue. - One should look for incomplete, unrelated or
opposite motor acts. For example, the patient
may inhale while blowing out the imaginary match.
30- Limb apraxia can involve the upper or lower limbs
and may be unilateral. Therefore, all four
extremities should be tested. Test by asking the
patient to Salute with your left hand, Put out
a cigarette with your left foot, Kick a ball
with your right foot, and Brush your teeth
holding the imaginary toothbrush with your right
hand. Observe for such errors as the use of a
finger for the toothbrush or failure to open the
mouth.
31- Truncal apraxia is tested with commands such as
bow or stand like a boxer.
32- Sympathetic apraxia is a left hemisphere lesion
in the motor association areas or white matter
disconnects motor regions of the two hemispheres.
As a result, fibers from the motor areas of the
dominant hemisphere do not reach the non-dominant
motor cortex. Patients are unable to carry out
commanded movements with their non-hemiplegic
left arm.
33- Callosal apraxia is related to sympathetic
apraxia and usually results from a lesion in the
anterior corpus callosum disconnecting the motor
areas of the two hemispheres. In callosal
apraxia, patients are unable to perform movements
on command with their left arm or leg, although
they execute commands easily with right-sided
limbs
34- Ideational apraxia refers to a disruption in the
logical and harmonious succession of separate
elements in a movement. Patients with
ideational apraxia may successfully perform
individual components of a complex sequence, but
fail to execute the correct series of actions.
35- Limb-kinetic apraxia refers to the loss of fine,
skilled movements following premotor lesions.
Patients are clumsy, slow and awkward in
executing motor tasks that were performed more
rapidy and precisely prior to cerebral insult.
36- Constructional apraxia is better described as
visual-spatial agnosia. Constructional apraxia
is tested by having the patient copy or
spontaneously draw figures, arrange blocks in
patterns, and construct or mentally manipulate
three-dimensional structures.
37- Apraxia refers to an acquired inability to
properly execute a learned skilled movement
following brain damage - Limb apraxia involves movement of the wrong
portion of a limb, incorrect movement of the
correct limb part, or an incorrect sequence of
movements - Callosal apraxia person cannot perform movement
of left hand to a verbal request (anterior
callosum interruption prevents information from
reaching right hemisphere) - Sympathetic apraxia damage to anterior left
hemisphere causes apraxia of the left arm (as
well as paralysis of right arm and hand) - Left parietal apraxia difficulty in initiating
movements to verbal request, in both limbs - Constructional apraxia is caused by right
parietal lobe damage - Person has difficulty with drawing pictures or
assembling objects