Flashcards: Corticobulbar Pathways and Cranial Nerve Control — 24 cartões

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1Pergunta

Origin of corticobulbar tract

Resposta

Mainly from primary motor cortex (BA4), especially lateral-inferior part.

2Pergunta

Cortical motor areas — primary

Resposta

Primary motor cortex (BA4) in precentral gyrus, executes voluntary movements.

3Pergunta

Cortical motor areas — premotor

Resposta

Premotor cortex (BA6), involved in movement planning and selection.

4Pergunta

Cortical motor areas — SMA

Resposta

Supplementary motor area (BA6), coordinates bilateral movements.

5Pergunta

Cortical motor areas — somatosensory

Resposta

Primary somatosensory cortex (BA3,1,2), provides sensory feedback.

6Pergunta

Destination nuclei — CN V

Resposta

Trigeminal nucleus, controls mastication muscles.

7Pergunta

Destination nuclei — CN VII

Resposta

Facial nucleus, controls mimic muscles; bilateral upper face, contralateral lower face.

8Pergunta

Destination nuclei — nucleus ambiguus

Resposta

Controls muscles of speech/swallowing; bilateral innervation.

9Pergunta

Destination nuclei — CN XII

Resposta

Hypoglossal nucleus, tongue muscles; upper bilateral, lower contralateral.

10Pergunta

Pathway of corticobulbar fibers

Resposta

From cortex, through corona radiata, genu of internal capsule, crus cerebri, brainstem to nuclei.

11Pergunta

Bilateral innervation — facial muscles

Resposta

Upper face: bilateral; lower face: contralateral corticobulbar input.

12Pergunta

Tongue muscle innervation — upper hypoglossal

Resposta

Bilateral corticobulbar input to most tongue muscles.

13Pergunta

Tongue muscle innervation — lower hypoglossal

Resposta

Contralateral corticobulbar input to genioglossus.

14Pergunta

Functions of corticobulbar

Resposta

Controls muscles for speech, swallowing, facial expression.

15Pergunta

Clinical lesion — Bell's palsy

Resposta

Ipsilateral facial paralysis including forehead; peripheral nerve lesion.

16Pergunta

Clinical lesion — corticobulbar

Resposta

Contralateral lower facial paralysis; forehead spared in central lesions.

17Pergunta

Origin of corticospinal tract

Resposta

Mainly from primary motor cortex (BA4), premotor, SMA, and S1.

18Pergunta

Corticospinal pathway course

Resposta

From cortex through corona radiata, internal capsule, crus cerebri, decussates at pyramids.

19Pergunta

Lateral vs anterior corticospinal

Resposta

Lateral decussates at pyramids, controls limbs; anterior remains ipsilateral, controls axial muscles.

20Pergunta

Descending tracts overview

Resposta

Includes corticospinal, corticobulbar, rubrospinal, vestibulospinal, reticulospinal.

21Pergunta

Lateral corticospinal — function

Resposta

Controls distal limb muscles for fine voluntary movements.

22Pergunta

Anterior corticospinal — function

Resposta

Controls axial and proximal muscles for posture.

23Pergunta

Decussation percentage

Resposta

80-85% decussate at pyramids; 15-20% remain ipsilateral.

24Pergunta

Collateral fibers from corticospinal

Resposta

Project to cranial nerve nuclei for facial, tongue, pharyngeal muscles.

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1. The origin of the corticobulbar tract is best identified as which of the following cortical areas?

2. What percentage of the corticobulbar tract is contributed by the primary motor cortex (BA4)?

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