| Literature DB >> 33923397 |
Jacky Ganguly1, Dinkar Kulshreshtha1, Mohammed Almotiri1, Mandar Jog1.
Abstract
The simple definition of tone as the resistance to passive stretch is physiologically a complex interlaced network encompassing neural circuits in the brain, spinal cord, and muscle spindle. Disorders of muscle tone can arise from dysfunction in these pathways and manifest as hypertonia or hypotonia. The loss of supraspinal control mechanisms gives rise to hypertonia, resulting in spasticity or rigidity. On the other hand, dystonia and paratonia also manifest as abnormalities of muscle tone, but arise more due to the network dysfunction between the basal ganglia and the thalamo-cerebello-cortical connections. In this review, we have discussed the normal homeostatic mechanisms maintaining tone and the pathophysiology of spasticity and rigidity with its anatomical correlates. Thereafter, we have also highlighted the phenomenon of network dysfunction, cortical disinhibition, and neuroplastic alterations giving rise to dystonia and paratonia.Entities:
Keywords: dystonia; paratonia; rigidity; spasticity
Year: 2021 PMID: 33923397 PMCID: PMC8071570 DOI: 10.3390/toxins13040282
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxins (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6651 Impact factor: 4.546
Figure 1Major interneurons in regulation of muscle tone.
Figure 2Descending long tracts in regulation of stretch reflex circuitry and muscle tone in humans. Main tracts for tone regulation have been highlighted in bold.
Difference between spasticity and rigidity.
| Differentiating Points | Spasticity | Rigidity |
|---|---|---|
| Velocity dependency | Yes | No |
| Resistance to movement | In one direction (flexion or extension) | In both directions |
| Length dependency | Yes | No |
| Type of hypertonicity | Clasp-knife | Lead pipe or Cog-wheel |
Figure 3Neuromodulatory inputs in pathophysiology of rigidity.
Figure 4Network model of dystonia. White arrows: pallido-thalamo-cortical network, Black arrows: cerebello-thalamo-cortico-cerebellar network.
Pathophysiological basis of spasticity, rigidity, dystonia and paratonia.
| Abnormalities in Tone | Basic Pathophysiology |
|---|---|
| Spasticity |
Altered spinal excitatory and inhibitory circuitry leading to increased excitation and decreased inhibition Supraspinal influence predominantly involving inhibitory drive from dorsal reticulospinal tract (dorsal RST) and facilitatory drive from medial reticulospinal tract (medial RST) Abnormal sensory feedback Non-neural factors like viscoelastic properties of muscle fiber and surrounding connective tissues |
| Rigidity |
Exaggeration of long-latency stretch reflexes (LLSR) Enhanced shortening reaction (SR) and stretch-induced inhibition (SII) Involvement of brainstem circuits involving sublaterodorsal nucleus, nucleus reticularis gigantocellularis (NRGC), locus coeruleus, caudal raphe and pedunculopontine nucleus (PPN) Alteration in functional connectivity in brain networks involving frontoparietal connection, premotor-pre-cuneus connection Non-neural factors like viscoelastic properties of muscle fiber and surrounding connective tissues |
| Dystonia |
Lack of surround inhibition Abnormal sensory-motor integration Abnormal synaptic plasticity Abnormalities in pallido-thalamo-cortical and cerebello-thalamo-cortical network |
| Paratonia |
Defective response inhibition from orbitofrontal damage and frontal-subcortical dysfunction Non-neural: Increase tissue stiffness from advanced glycation end products (AGE) deposition |