Basal ganglia & cerebellar pathology Vivian Phan.

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Basal ganglia & cerebellar pathology Vivian Phan

Transcript of Basal ganglia & cerebellar pathology Vivian Phan.

Page 1: Basal ganglia & cerebellar pathology Vivian Phan.

Basal ganglia & cerebellar pathology

Vivian Phan

Page 2: Basal ganglia & cerebellar pathology Vivian Phan.

Cerebellum

MAJOR TRACTS THAT GO THROUGH CEREBELLUM:- Spinocerebellar (sensory/ascending): unconscious proprioception- Vestibulospinal (motor/ extrapyramidal): balance, posture (+ extensors)- Olivocerebellar

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Cerebellar lesionsLesion Causes Symptoms

Posterior lobe= Neocerebellar lesions

- Vascular e.g. stroke- Tumours- Neurodegenerative

Dysmetria, DysdiadochokinesiaAtaxiaNystagmusIntention tremorSlurred speechHypotonia

Anterior lobe= Gait/limbic ataxia

- Alcohol- Malnutrition-> improve symptoms if stop drinking

- Drunken gait, can’t walk straight- Head tremor

Midline= Truncal ataxia

Medulloblastoma in 4th ventricle – young children-> Affect Vestibular n.

- Fall towards most affected side- May involve eye movements

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Basal ganglia

Basal ganglia consists of 4 subcortical nuclei:1. Striatum (caudate nucleus, putamen, nucleus accumbens)2. Globus pallidus (Gp)3. Subthalamic nucleus4. Substantia nigra

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BG movement disorders

• Bradykinesia / hypokinesia• Rigidity• Dystonia• Athetosis• Chorea• Ballismus• Tics• Myoclonus• Tremor (fast or slow depending on type)

FAST

SLOW

HYPERKINETICUnwanted or excessive

movements

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BG movement disorders

Striatum Huntington’s chorea

GP Choreoathetosis e.g. Wilson’s

Subthalamic nucleus (Hemi)Ballismus

Substantia nigra Parkinson’s

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BG disorder treatmentsDisorder Pathology Drugs

Huntington’s (AD)

- Degeneration of cholinergic neurons in striatum- Extended CAG repeat- Movements + dementia

- Dopamine depleting drugs (release = involuntary mvmts): Tetrabenazine- Antipsychotics (chorea, hallucinations, violence): Risperidone, Quetiapine- Benzodiazepines - relax- Treat moods: SSRIs, TCAs

Wilson’s (AR)

- copper metabolism -> deposits in liver & BG- Choreathetosis, dementia- Liver cirrhosis- Kayser-Fleischer ring

Copper chelators (pick up excess copper): Penicillamine, Trientine

Ballismus - Degeneration of subthalamic nucleus

- Unilat, involuntary flinging mvmts of prox limbs

- Dopamine antagonists- Dopamine depleting drugs- GABAergics e.g. antiepileptic,

gabapentin, benzodiazepine

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BG disorder treatmentDisorder Pathology Treatment

Parkinson’s - Loss of dopamine in SN and striatum- Degeneration of SN (and other basal ganglia nuclei)- Lewy bodies (plaques)

- Levodopa = Dopamine precursor- Drugs to dopamine breakdown: DDC inhibitor, COMT inhibitor, MAO-B inhibitor- Anticholinergics

Essential tremor

- Progressive, intention tremor (not at rest)- Start in arms -> other parts of body

Beta blockers - Propanolol

General rule:- Hypokinesia (e.g. Parkinson’s): Dopamine levels – precursor, prevent breakdown- Hyperkinesia (the rest!): Dopamine levels – antagonists, depletors, then relaxants

(to calm them down)

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Motor controlMotor System Normal role Dysfunction

Descending tracts Purposeful, rapid, skilled, intricate movements;

influence over motor tone & reflexes

Loss of skilled voluntary movements; characteristic changes in tone &

reflexes

Basal ganglia Fine control/adjustment of movement by facilitation

&/or suppression

Movement disorders - affecting the speed of movement &/or unwanted

movements

Cerebellum Coordination of movements, posture,

balance, eye movement, planning of movement,

procedural memory

Ataxia = Unsteady & jerky movements = loss of coordination & accuracy of limb/trunk movement