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Definitions and Pathophysiology of Spasticity Definition of

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Title: Definitions and Pathophysiology of Spasticity Definition of


1
Definitions and Pathophysiology of Spasticity
2
Definition of Spasticity
  • Spasticity is a motor disorder characterized by
    a velocity-dependent increase in tonic stretch
    reflexes (muscle tone) with exaggerated tendon
    jerks, resulting from hyperexcitability of the
    stretch reflex, as one component of the upper
    motor neuron syndrome. -- Lance, 1980
  • Tonic Stretch Reflex
  • Tonic muscle response to vibratory stretch
  • Tonic response to a phasic stimulus
  • Thus spasticity velocity-dependent increase of
    muscle response to phasic stretch, routinely
    tested by tendon taps or passive mobilization

3
What is spasticity
  • Velocity dependent tonic stretch reflex
  • Resulting from abnormal processing of
    propioceptive input
  • In response to stretching the muscle
  • Other influences
  • Nociceptive
  • Loss of reciprocal inhibition

4
Terminology
  • Spasticity
  • Motor disorder
  • Velocity-dependent increase in stretch reflexes
  • One component of the upper motor neuron (UMN)
    syndrome
  • UMN Syndrome
  • Positive symptoms
  • Increased tone
  • Clonus
  • Released flexor reflexes
  • Negative symptoms
  • Loss of dexterity
  • Weakness

5
Upper Motor Neurone Syndrome
  • Spastic Dystonia
  • Spastic Paresis
  • Symptoms
  • Positive Negative

6
Features of Spasticity
  • Positive Symptoms
  • Muscle Tone
  • Tendon Jerks
  • Repetitive Stretch Reflexes - Clonus
  • Extensor St. Reflexes
  • Released Flexor Reflexes - Babinski, Mass synergy
    pattern
  • Negative Symptoms
  • Paresis
  • Fine Control
  • Dexterity
  • Fatiguability
  • Early Hypotonia

7
Etiologies
  • Cerebral palsy
  • Stroke
  • Multiple sclerosis
  • Traumatic brain injury
  • Spinal cord injury
  • Anoxia
  • Neurodegenerative disease

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8
Vicious cycle
  • Spasticity
  • Shortened muscle
  • Greater activity
  • More spasticity
  • Spasticity is relieved by stretching
  • Clasp knife

9
Pathophysiology
  • Spinal Reflexes - Afferent Drive
  • Efferent Reflexes - Non-Afferent Drive
  • Disordered Control of Vol. Movement

10
Pathophysiology
11
Pathophysiology
  • Normal tone is a balance of inhibitory and
    excitatory control
  • In spasticity, normal inhibitory control is
    lost/diminished

12
Spasticity
INCREASED MUSCLE TONE
MUSCLE SHORTENING
CONTRACTURE
13
Pathophysiology of Spasticity
  • Not completely understood, despite considerable
    investigation
  • Interruption of descending inhibitory pathways
  • Rearrangement of spinal circuitry

14
Pathophysiology of Spasticity Established
Mechanisms
  • Alterations within the reflex arc
  • Change in muscle active properties (increased
    ratio torque/EMG)
  • Change in muscle passive properties (decreased
    extensibility)
  • Decreased pre-synaptic inhibition, at least in
    paraplegics
  • Increased fusimotor activity and increased
    excitability of the alpha motor neuron have not
    been established

15
Pathophysiology of Spasticity Established
Mechanisms, contd
  • Mechanisms affecting the reflex arc
  • Decreased reciprocal Ia inhibition on extensors
  • Decreased non-reciprocal Ib inhibition
  • Decreased inhibition from flexor reflex afferents

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16
Phenomena Commonly Associated with Spasticity
  • Abnormal cutaneous reflexes (Babinski sign)
  • Spastic dystonia
  • muscle contraction present at rest, dependent on
    tonic stretch
  • significant contribution to deformity
  • Spastic co-contraction
  • abnormal antagonist contraction present during
    voluntary agonist effort, dependent on tonic
    stretch on antagonist
  • Extra-segmental co-contraction
  • abnormal contraction distant from the muscles
    involved in a voluntary effort

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17
Phenomena Commonly Associated with Spasticity,
contd
  • Other types of muscle overactivity (present with
    yawning, breathing etc.)
  • Muscle shortening
  • consequence of both immobilization and muscle
    overactivity
  • Motor weakness
  • significant source of disability

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18
Disabling Phenomena Associated with Spasticity
  • Muscle shortening, motor weakness,
  • and stretch-dependent muscle overactivity
  • (spastic co-contraction and spastic dystonia)
  • are probably the most disabling features in
  • spastic patients.
  • ? Three logical solutions in therapy
  • muscle lengthening, motor training,
  • and local muscle relaxation

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19
Pathophysiology of Impairment After a Central
Nervous System Lesion
20
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