Everything about Pyramidal Tract totally explained
The
corticospinal or
pyramidal tract is a massive collection of
axons that travel between the
cerebral cortex of the
brain and the
spinal cord.
The
corticospinal tract mostly contains motor
axons. It actually consists of two separate tracts in the spinal cord: the
lateral corticospinal tract and the
anterior corticospinal tract. An understanding of these tracts leads to an understanding of why for the most part, one side of the body is controlled by the opposite side of the brain.
Also the
corticobulbar tract is considered to be a pyramidal tract. The corticobulbar tract carries signals that control motor neurons located in cranial nerve brain nuclei rather than motor neurons located in the spinal cord.
The
neurons of the pyramidal tracts are
pyramidal neurons, but that isn't how the pyramidal tract got its name, as most of the pyramidal neurons send their axons elsewhere. Instead, it got its name from the shape of the corticospinal axon tracts: when the pyramidal tract passes the
medulla, it forms a dense bundle of nerve fibres that's shaped somewhat like a pyramid.
The motor pathway
The corticospinal tract originates from
pyramidal cells in
layer V of the
motor cortex.
Upper motor neurons
The motor neuron cell bodies in the
motor cortex, together with their axons that travel down through the
brain stem and
spinal cord, are referred to as
upper motor neurons.
Decussation and synapses
The
neuronal cell bodies in the motor cortex send long axons to the motor
cranial nerve nuclei mainly of the contralateral side of the
midbrain (
cortico-mesencephalic tract),
pons (
cortico-pontine tract),
medulla oblongata (
cortico-bulbar tract); the bulk of these fibers, however, extend all the way down to the
spinal cord (corticospinal tract).
Whichever of these two tracts it travels in, a cortico-spinal
axon will
synapse with another neuron in the
ventral horn. This ventral horn neuron is considered a second-order neuron in this pathway, but isn't part of the corticospinal tract itself.
From cerebral to motor neurons
The motor axons move closer together as they travel down through the cerebral
white matter, and form part of the
posterior limb of the
internal capsule.
The motor fibers continue down into the
brainstem. The bundle of corticospinal axons is visible as two column-like structures ("
pyramids") on the ventral surface of
medulla oblongata - this is where the name
pyramidal tract comes from.
After the decussation, the axons travel down the
spinal cord as the
lateral corticospinal tract. Fibers that don't cross over in the
medulla oblongata travel down the separate
anterior corticospinal tract, and most of them cross over to the contralateral side in the
spinal cord, shortly before reaching the
lower motor neurons.
Lower motor neurons
In the spinal cord, the axons of the upper motor neuron connect (most of them via
interneurons, but to a lesser extent also via direct
synapses) with the
lower motor neurons (LMNs), located in the
ventral horn of the spinal cord.
In the
brain stem, the
lower motor neurons are located in the motor
cranial nerve nuclei (
occulomotor,
trochlear, motor nucleus of the
trigeminal nerve,
abducens,
facial,
accessory,
hypoglossal). The
lower motor neuron axons leave the
brain stem via motor cranial nerves and the
spinal cord via anterior roots of the
spinal nerves respectively, end-up at the
neuromuscular plate and provide motor innervation for voluntary muscles.
Sensory pathways
Spinothalamic tract
Spinocerebellar tract
Visual pathway
Olfactory system
Posterior column pathway
Corticospinal tract damage
see upper motor neuron.
Extrapyramidal motor pathways
These are motor pathways that lie outside the corticospinal tract and are beyond voluntary control. Their main function is to support voluntary movement and help control posture and muscle tone. See extrapyramidal motor system.
Additional images
Image:Gray683.png|Dissection of brain-stem. Lateral view.
Image:Gray689.png|Superficial dissection of brain-stem. Ventral view.
Image:Gray764.png|The motor tract.
Image:Medulla spinalis - tracts - English.svg
Further Information
Get more info on 'Pyramidal Tract'.
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