Kinesiology 1080A/B Lecture 13: Mon, Feb. 11:19 – Lecture 13- Spinal Cord

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Mon, feb. 11/19 lecture 13: spinal cord. Spinal cord: afferent fibers: occupy dorsal and external lateral portions of the spinal cord, efferent fibers: occupy ventral and internal lateral portions of the spinal cord. Intrafusal: sensory feedback via dorsal root: connection is monosynaptic with the alpha motor neuron, monosynaptic stretch reflex. Sends sensory information through the spinal cord: via the dorsal root ganglion synapses to an interneuron. Interneurons are inhibitory (red: protects the muscle from tearing at the neurotendinous junction. Interneurons exist at one level: propriospinal neurons: connect neurons in the spinal cord but travel between segments within the spinal cord, travel multiple lengths, exist at multiple levels. Bilateral: caudal: innervates lower alpha motor neurons (lower facial control) - Upper motor neuron injury: selective paralysis, contralesion lower facial musculature. Infection of mastoid process: complete paralysis in the side of the ipsilesional infection. Lower facial paralysis usually means upper motor neuron injury to the cortical bulbar fibres in the caudal part.

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