| Literature DB >> 25294995 |
Mamede de Carvalho1, Andrew Eisen2, Charles Krieger3, Michael Swash4.
Abstract
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis is an inexorably progressive neurodegenerative disorder involving the classical motor system and the frontal effector brain, causing muscular weakness and atrophy, with variable upper motor neuron signs and often an associated fronto-temporal dementia. The physiological disturbance consequent on the motor system degeneration is beginning to be well understood. In this review we describe aspects of the motor cortical, neuronal, and lower motor neuron dysfunction. We show how studies of the changes in the pattern of motor unit firing help delineate the underlying pathophysiological disturbance as the disease progresses. Such studies are beginning to illuminate the underlying disordered pathophysiological processes in the disease, and are important in designing new approaches to therapy and especially for clinical trials.Entities:
Keywords: amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; lower motor neuron; motor cortex; motor units firing; upper motor neuron
Year: 2014 PMID: 25294995 PMCID: PMC4170108 DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2014.00719
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Hum Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5161 Impact factor: 3.169
Some characteristics of descending motor tracts.
| Run mainly in the contralateral lateral funiculus of the spinal cord. |
| Mainly control distal limb muscles rather than axial and proximal muscles. |
| Exert stronger excitatory effects on flexor muscles and stronger inhibitory effects on extensor muscles. |
| Excitatory inputs are mediated monosynaptically and inhibitory inputs disynaptically. |
| The medial system is phylogenetically and ontogenetically older than the lateral system. |
| The tracts in the medial system mainly run in the ventral funiculus. |
| The medial system characteristically steers the body, and integrates limb and body movements as well as developing movement synergisms of individual limbs, involving various parts. |
| Discrete lesions of the medial system usually produces motor disturbance of the axial and the proximal muscles. |
Some descending and segmental inputs on motor neurons.
| Tract or Input | Origin | Target | Significance | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Corticospinal tract | Widespread cortical regions – especially frontal cortex | Direct contact with dendrites of motor neurons | Single CST axons project to different motor neuron pools | |
| Rubrospinal tract | Magnocellular red nucleus | Motor neurons of forelimbs | Significance unknown, possible role in early motor development | |
| Reticulospinal tract | Arises from pontine and medullary reticular formation | Direct and indirect inputs to motor neurons | May influence motor behavior especially after damage to CST.Regulate tonic motor neurons | |
| Propriospinal tract | Cervical spinal cord | May be indirect | Reaching and grasp behavior,may mediate some CST activation | |
| Locus coeruleus | Fibers arise from locus coeruleus, but also adjacent brainstem sites | Widespread projections in spinal cord including motor neurons | Important source for adrenergic inputs to motor neurons, may regulate persistent inward currents (PIC) | |
| Raphe nucleus | Raphe nucleus | Widespread projections | Likely provide serotonergic input to motor neurons | |
| Voc neurons | Small group of spinal interneurons (transcription factor Pitx2) | Direct input to motor neuron soma and proximal dendrites (∼5%) | Responsible for cholinergic input to motoneurons and “C-type” synapses | |
| Other interneuron populations | Other small interneuron populations (V1–V3) | Segmental inputs | Modulation of motor neuron firing |