Title: Control of Movement
1Control of Movement
2Motor Systems
- Functions
- movement
- posture balance
- communication
- Guided by sensory systems
- internal representation of world self
- detect changes in environment
- external internal
33 Classes of Movement
- Voluntary
- complex actions
- reading, writing, playing piano
- purposeful, goal-oriented
- learned
- improve with practice
43 Classes of Movement
- Reflexes
- involuntary, rapid, stereotyped
- eye-blink, coughing, knee jerk
- graded control by eliciting stimulus
- Rhythmic motor patterns
- combines voluntary reflexive acts
- chewing, walking, running
- initiation termination voluntary
- once initiated, repetitive reflexive
5Movement Muscles
- Movement occurs at joints
- Contraction relaxation of of opposing muscles
- agonists
- prime movers
- antagonists
- counterbalance agonists
- decelerate movement
6Movement Muscles
- Movement control more than contraction
relaxation - Accurately time control of many muscles
- Make postural adjustment during movement
- Adjust for mechanical properties of joints
muscles - inertia, changing positions
7Sensorimotor Integration
- Perceptual development
- Active interaction required
- environmental feedback important
- Held Hein (1950s)
- kittens passively moved
- depth perception deficits
- related responses, blinking, looming
8Sensorimotor Integration
- Sensory inputs guide movement
- visual, auditory, tactile
- location of objects in space
- Proprioceptive vestibular
- position of our body
- Critical for planning refining movements
9Error Correction Feedback
- During or after movement
- Compare actual position with intended position
- if different ----gt make correction
- muscle contractions
- Limited to slow movements
10Error Correction Feed-forward
- Sensory events control movements in advance
- ballistic movements
- Prediction
- internal model of events
- e.g. catching ball
- representation of ball trajectory
- properties of musculoskeletal system
- Reevaluation after response completed
11Sensorimotor Impairments
- Impaired proprioception ---gt motor deficits
- Large-fiber sensory neuropathy
- Aa Ab afferents degenerate
- proprioceptive tactile feedback
- Cant hold arm steady w/o visual input
- starts to drift after few seconds
- psuedo-athetosis
12Sensorimotor Impairments
- Feed-forward control
- eyes open ballistic movements OK
- eyes closed
- ballistic movements highly inaccurate
- hand drifts at end of movement
- Eyes open only prior to movement
- errors greatly reduced
- lack of info about starting position
13Organization of Motor Control
- Hierarchical Parallel
- Parallel
- pathways active simultaneously
- e.g. moving arm
- 1. muscles producing movement
- 2. postural adjustments during movement
- Recovery of function after lesion
- overlapping functions
14Hierarchical Control of Movement
- 3 levels of control
- Spinal cord (SC)
- Brainstem
- Cortex
- Division of responsibility
- higher levels general commands
- spinal cord complex specific
- Each receives sensory input
- relevant to levels function
15Hierarchical Control Spinal Cord
- Automatic stereotyped responses
- reflexes
- rhythmic motor patterns
- Can function without brain
- Spinal interneurons
- same circuits as voluntary movement
- Pathways converge on a motor neurons
- final common path
16Hierarchical Control Spinal Cord
- Motor neurons in ventral horn
- Topographical organization of motor nuclei
- a.k.a. motor neuron pools
- longitudinal columns across 1-4 spinal segments
- according to 2 rules
17Topographical organization of motor nuclei
- Flexor-Extensor rule
- ventral extensors
- dorsal flexors
- Proximal-distal rule
- medial proximal muscles
- lateral distal muscles
- Parallel control systems
- proximal postural
- distal manipulative
18Hierarchical Control Brain Stem
- Modulates neurons in spinal cord
- interneuerons motor neurons
- 2 main parallel pathways
- Medial
- to ventromedial spinal cord
- postural / proximal muscles
- Lateral
- to dorsolateral spinal cord
- manipulative / distal muscles
19Hierarchical Control Cortex
- 2 tracts
- Corticobulbar ---gtcranial nerves
- facial muscles
- Corticospinal ---gt spinal nerves
- Origin of axons
- 1/3 from primary motor cortex (M1)
- 1/3 from premotor areas
- 1/3 from somatosensory cortex
20Corticospinal Tract
- Direct control Indirect control
- Parallel pathways
- Direct ---gt spinal neurons
- Indirect control via
- cortico-reticulospinal tact
- cortico-rubrospinal tract
21Corticospinal Tract
- More parallel pathways
- Lateral corticospinal tract
- contralateral projections
- decussate at medullary pyramid
- distal muscles
- Ventral corticospinal tract
- ipsilateral projection
- proximal muscles
22Effects of Lesions
- Motor cortex projections
- locus of damage determines deficit
- Cerebral Vascular Accidents (CVA)
- most common cause
232 classes of abnormal function
- Negative signs
- Loss of function
- e.g., weakness, loss of strength
- Positive signs
- stereotyped, abnormal responses
- release phenomena
- loss of normal inhibitory influences
- e.g., lesion of basal ganglia ---gt involuntary
movements
24Positive Signs Babinski Sign
- Lesion of corticospinal tract
- Plantar reflex
- Stroke firmly stroke sole of foot
- heel ---gt toe
- Normal flexion
- toe curl down
- Lesion Extension
- toes curl up and fan
25Muscle Weakness
- Lesions produce different syndromes
- Lower motor neuron syndrome
- spinal motor neurons
- lesion soma or axon
- symptoms
- weakness
- fasciculations
- atrophy
26Muscle Weakness
- Upper motor neuron syndrome
- descending motor pathways
- imbalance of excitatory/inhibitory interneurons
- symptoms
- spasticity occurs
- tonicity deep tendon reflexes
- atrophy is rare
- no fasciculations
27Parallel Control Recovery
- Fractionation of movement
- independent control of single muscles
- via direct input from corticospinal tract
- Lesion in medullary pyramids
- can no longer grasp objects
- locomotion, posture unaffected
- Parallel pathways assume control
28Parallel Control Recovery
- Monkeys If premotor outflow spared
- indirect control via brainstem
- strength returns
- but movement slow
- M1 ---gt lateral brainstem intact
- cortico-rubrospinal cortico-reticulospinal
tracts assume control - humans fewer fibers ---gt less recovery