Motor Neurons

From WikiLectures
This revision has been recently reviewed from this computer!
Number of reviews: 0x, number of edits 8, number of authors 4   
   Thank you for your review (0★)   
star1-0 star2-0 star3-0 star4-0 star5-0
Jump to: navigation, search

Contents

Motor neurons are cells, which are able to coordinate a motoric function of our body by their influence on contraction and relaxation of the muscles. They are also sometimes called efferent neurons, because they lead information from central nervous system to muscles and tell them what to do.

Motor neuron in a spinal cord
Motor neuron

We can divide motorneurons according to the target systems:


edit edit Lower motorneuron

edit edit Upper motoneuron


edit edit Lesions of the motorneurons

A lesion of the motoneuron can be on the upper or on the lower part of a system, but the result is similar in both cases - movement disorders. There are few types of a classification and one of them is a division on the positive and the negative symptoms. Another classification is based on on the degree of disability.

  1. positive symptoms – a function is increased: convulsions, muscle spasms;
  2. negative symptoms – a function is decreased: paresis (partial damage of movement ability), plegia (complete lost of movement ability).


  1. monoplegia (monoparesis) – disability of one limb;
  2. hemiplegia (hemiparesis) – disability of right or left part of a body;
  3. paraplegia (paraparesis) – disability of lower limbs;
  4. quadruplegia (quadruparesis) – involvement of all limbs.


edit edit Comparison between central and periferal lesion of motorneurons

Function Upper motorneuron lesion Lower motorneuron lesion
Movement ability more affected groups of muscles (diffuse damage) affected is just one innervated region
Reflexes increased (the influence of central inhibition is nonfuctional) decreased or disappeared
Muscle tone increased (hypertonia: spasticity or rigidity) decreased (hypotonia)
Trophic muscle atrophy occurs later as a result of an inactivity early muscle atrophy
Patological movements irritative phenomena fasciculations (spontaneous contractions of muscles); fibrilations (spontaneous contractions of a single muscle fiber)



edit edit Links

edit edit Related articles

edit edit External links

edit edit Bibliography

Personal tools
Namespaces
Variants
Actions
Navigation
Portals
Exam topics
Toolbox
PDF version