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Cerebellum and Basal Ganglia Suzanne Stensaas, PhD (David Roman Renner, MD) 2009 Kenya Curriculum repurposed for Dental Neuroanatomy 2012
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Cerebellum and Basal Ganglia - anatomy.med.utah.edu Cerebell... · Cerebellar and basal ganglia signs are usually not present if the corticospinal tract is damaged. The cerebellum

Mar 11, 2019

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Page 1: Cerebellum and Basal Ganglia - anatomy.med.utah.edu Cerebell... · Cerebellar and basal ganglia signs are usually not present if the corticospinal tract is damaged. The cerebellum

Cerebellum and Basal Ganglia

Suzanne Stensaas, PhD(David Roman Renner, MD)

2009 Kenya Curriculumrepurposed for Dental Neuroanatomy

2012

Page 2: Cerebellum and Basal Ganglia - anatomy.med.utah.edu Cerebell... · Cerebellar and basal ganglia signs are usually not present if the corticospinal tract is damaged. The cerebellum

BG

CBLM

Courtesy of Stephen C. Voron, MD

Page 3: Cerebellum and Basal Ganglia - anatomy.med.utah.edu Cerebell... · Cerebellar and basal ganglia signs are usually not present if the corticospinal tract is damaged. The cerebellum

BG

CBLM

Courtesy of Stephen C. Voron, MD

Page 4: Cerebellum and Basal Ganglia - anatomy.med.utah.edu Cerebell... · Cerebellar and basal ganglia signs are usually not present if the corticospinal tract is damaged. The cerebellum

BG

CBLM

pyramidalcell in themotorhomunculusof the frontallobe

Courtesy of Stephen C. Voron, MD

Page 5: Cerebellum and Basal Ganglia - anatomy.med.utah.edu Cerebell... · Cerebellar and basal ganglia signs are usually not present if the corticospinal tract is damaged. The cerebellum

BG

CBLM

corticospinaltract

Courtesy of Stephen C. Voron, MD

Page 6: Cerebellum and Basal Ganglia - anatomy.med.utah.edu Cerebell... · Cerebellar and basal ganglia signs are usually not present if the corticospinal tract is damaged. The cerebellum

BG

CBLMdecussationat thepyramids(spino-medullaryjunction

Courtesy of Stephen C. Voron, MD

Page 7: Cerebellum and Basal Ganglia - anatomy.med.utah.edu Cerebell... · Cerebellar and basal ganglia signs are usually not present if the corticospinal tract is damaged. The cerebellum

BG

CBLM

thalamus:AKA the“gate keeper”preventsunwantedmovements

Courtesy of Stephen C. Voron, MD

T

Page 8: Cerebellum and Basal Ganglia - anatomy.med.utah.edu Cerebell... · Cerebellar and basal ganglia signs are usually not present if the corticospinal tract is damaged. The cerebellum

BG

CBLM

BASALGANGLIA

consultant onautomaticmovements

providesinput into thethalamus

Courtesy of Stephen C. Voron, MD

T

Page 9: Cerebellum and Basal Ganglia - anatomy.med.utah.edu Cerebell... · Cerebellar and basal ganglia signs are usually not present if the corticospinal tract is damaged. The cerebellum

Courtesy of Stephen C. Voron, MD

Cerebellum:

consultant onrapidmovements

providesinput into thethalamus

BG

CBLM

Page 10: Cerebellum and Basal Ganglia - anatomy.med.utah.edu Cerebell... · Cerebellar and basal ganglia signs are usually not present if the corticospinal tract is damaged. The cerebellum

Basal Ganglia Symptoms

• resting tremor• postural instability• festination• rigidity• masked facies• bradykinesia• dyskinesia• torticollis• chorea• athetosis• hemiballismus• akathisia

Cerebellar Symptoms

• intention tremor• dysmetria• dysdiadochokinesia• hypotonia• heal to shin• finger to nose• rebound• ataxic gait• titubation• nystagmus• dysmetric saccades

Page 11: Cerebellum and Basal Ganglia - anatomy.med.utah.edu Cerebell... · Cerebellar and basal ganglia signs are usually not present if the corticospinal tract is damaged. The cerebellum

Basal ganglia lesions producecontralateral signs.

Cerebellar lesions produceipsilateral signs.

Page 12: Cerebellum and Basal Ganglia - anatomy.med.utah.edu Cerebell... · Cerebellar and basal ganglia signs are usually not present if the corticospinal tract is damaged. The cerebellum

Most movement disorders produced bycerebellar and basal ganglia pathologydisappear during sleep.

Cerebellar and basal ganglia signs areusually not present if the corticospinal tractis damaged.

Page 13: Cerebellum and Basal Ganglia - anatomy.med.utah.edu Cerebell... · Cerebellar and basal ganglia signs are usually not present if the corticospinal tract is damaged. The cerebellum

The cerebellum is the great comparator:

1. It compares cortical willful command with muscle tension, joint position, & tone (via ipsilateral spinocerebellar tracts)

2. Advises the cortex on how much, how many, how fast3. The motor cortex sends the revised command down the corticospinal tract

Page 14: Cerebellum and Basal Ganglia - anatomy.med.utah.edu Cerebell... · Cerebellar and basal ganglia signs are usually not present if the corticospinal tract is damaged. The cerebellum

The BASAL GANGLIA are the autopilotfor procedural movements.

The CEREBELLUM is the refiner offinely controlled movements

(particularly of fingers).

Page 15: Cerebellum and Basal Ganglia - anatomy.med.utah.edu Cerebell... · Cerebellar and basal ganglia signs are usually not present if the corticospinal tract is damaged. The cerebellum

COMPARISON OF MOTOR SYSTEMShttp://library.med.utah.edu/neurologicexam/html/home_exam.html

Lower Motor Neuron

Spinal Cord

Upper Motor Neuron

Corticospinal Tract

Cerebellum Basal Ganglia

Normal

Efferent part of

monosynaptic reflex

Voluntary movement Rapid coordinated alternating

skilled movements that are

learned

Facilitates intentional

movements and inhibit

extraneous movements

Muscle tone by

inhibiting antagonists

Muscle tone Eye-head movements Autopilot for motor activities

Maintains muscle

fibers (trophic factors)

Fine control, espec. finger

flexors

Posture and Gait

Inhibitory to Lower motor

neurons

Balance, equilibrium,

orientation in space

Voluntary movements in an

automatic manor.

Weakness or paralysis Weakness or paralysis timing, duration, and amplitude

Abnormal

Areflexia Hyperreflexia

Hyperactive deep tendon

reflexes

Truncal ataxia, gait ataxi a Shuffling or festinating gait,

small steps, hard to turn

Fasciculation Babinski- extensor plantar

reflex

Nystagmus, Dizziness , Masked facies, few blinks

Muscle Atrophy Spasticity Decomposition of movement Difficulty turning or starting,

hypokinetic = bradykinesia

Flaccid paralysis Dysmetria- ataxia of arms Paucity of associated

movements

Dysynergia

Dysdiadochokinesia- inability

to do rapid alternating

movements

Chorea, athetosis,

hyperkinetic

Hypotonia- pendular reflexes Rigidity ( lead-pipe )

(cogwheel),

Intention tremor Resting tremor

Scanning speech Soft speech

Page 16: Cerebellum and Basal Ganglia - anatomy.med.utah.edu Cerebell... · Cerebellar and basal ganglia signs are usually not present if the corticospinal tract is damaged. The cerebellum

Courtesy of Stephen C. Voron, MD