NUR 606 Exam 3
Paralysis - -loss of motor function
Paresis - -weakness
Plegia - -stroke or paralysis
Mono- - -one limb
Hemi- - -both limbs on one side
Di- or para- - -both upper limbs or both lower limbs
Quadric- or tetra- - -all four limbs
3 possible problems with the motor unit - -
1. skeletal muscle atrophy/dystrophy
2. neuromuscular junction disorders
3. peripheral nerve injury
The motor unit - -alpha motor neuron and the muscle fibers it innervates
Most of the diseases of the motor unit cause... - -weakness and wasting of skeletal
muscle
Components of the motor unit which cause disease when affected - -
1. cell body of the motor neuron
2. the axon of the motor neuron
3. the neuromuscular junction (NMJ)
4. muscle fibers
Muscle atrophy - -lack of muscle activity; reduces muscle size, tone, and power
Reduction in the diameter of the muscle fibers because of a loss of protein filaments
Skeletal Muscle Problems: Disuse Atrophy - -- think of how a leg in a cast gets small
and weak
- normally innervated muscle is not used for a long period of time
- muscle cells shrink in diameter, lose contractile proteins, and become weak (do not
die)
Skeletal Muscle Problems: Muscular Dystrophy - -- DMD and BMD x-linked recessive
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- caused by mutations in the dystrophin gene
Pathophysiology of muscular dystrophy - -the mutation in the dystrophin gene means
that the dystrophin protein is not properly attached to the cell membrane, and the
muscle cells do not effectively contract. There is progressive degeneration and eventual
necrosis of the muscle tissue. Finally, the muscle is replaced by connective tissue
Dystrophin - -Links thin filaments to proteins of sarcolemma
Duchene muscular dystrophy (DMD) - -*no dystrophin*
most common form of muscular dystrophy; affects primarily boys with onset between
the ages of 3 and 5 years; the disorder progresses rapidly so that most of these boys
are unable to walk by age 12 and later need a respirator to breathe
Becker muscular dystrophy (BMD) - -*some dystrophin*
very similar to, but less severe than, Duchenne muscular dystrophy
Neuromuscular Junction Problems: Decreased Ach Release - -- botulism
- gentamicin
Neuromuscular Junction Problems: Decreased Achesterase - -- physostigmine
- neostigmine
- organophosphates
Neuromuscular Junction Problems: Decreased ACh effects on Muscle Cells - -- curare
- myasthenia gravis
Botulism - -Clostridium botulinum is a rod shaped bacteria found in soil.
BLOCKS THE RELEASE OF ACH INTO THE NMJ
Gentamicin - -Aminoglycoside antibiotic
adverse effect is that is can BLOCK THE RELEASE OF ACH INTO THE NMJ
Physostigmine and Neostigmine - -used to treat myasthenia graves
INHIBIT ACHESTERASE meaning PREVENTS THE BREAKDOWN OF ACH so ACh
stays in the NMJ longer
- causes loss of respiratory function
organophosphates - -bind to achesterase and prevent them from breacking down ach
- cause loss of respiratory function
curare - -a drug that blocks nicotinic acetylcholine receptors
- ACh cannot bind to the receptors on the muscle cells
- it paralyzes the individual, but eventually it wears off
- think of poison darts used by indigenous South American people
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myasthenia gravis - -a chronic autoimmune disease that affects the neuromuscular
junction and produces serious weakness of voluntary muscles
- the ach receptors don't work, so they are treated with drugs that prevent the
breakdown of ACh in the NMJ to make the ACh available for longer
Myasthenia Gravis - -- autoimmune disease
- gradual destruction of ACh receptors b/c the patient makes autoantibodies for the
receptors
- gradual development of weakness from proximal to distal (usually starts with drooping
eyelid)
myasthenia crisis - -respiration compromised
True or false?
Acetylcholinesterase stimulates the release of acetylcholine (ACh). - -FALSE
Acetylcholinesterase breaks down ACh, resulting in relaxation of the skeletal muscle.
Peripheral Nerve Injuries - --demyelination
-axonal degeneration
-mononeuropathies
-polyneuropathies
demyelination - -Segmental demyelination: this occurs when there is a disorder of
schwann cells or damage to the myelin sheath like in guillain barre syndrome.
axonal degeneration - -usually due to primary injury to cell body or the axon in the spinal
and peripheral nerves
Looking at trauma or neuropathy and degenerative changes in the axons
Mononeuropathies - -DAMAGE TO ONE NERVE
Usually associated with a known peripheral nerve injury, and pain is felt at least partly
along the distribution of the damaged nerve.
Examples: nerve root compression, nerve entrapment, trigeminal neuralgia, CARPAL
TUNNEL
Polyneuropathies - -Client feels pain along the distribution of MANY PERIPHERAL
NERVES.
Examples: diabetic neuropathy, alcohol-nutritional neuropathy, and Guillain-Barré
syndrome.
Cerebellum Damage - -1. Vestibulocerebellar Damage: difficulty maintaining posture
2. Cerebellar Ataxia: staggering, lurching, uncontrolled gait
3. Cerebellar Tremor: rhythmic back & forth, inability to make smooth corrections in
movements
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