Basal Ganglia - The Brain's Grand Central

- Key Structures & Roles:
- Striatum (Caudate + Putamen): Main input station.
- Globus Pallidus (GPe, GPi): GPi is a major output nucleus.
- Subthalamic Nucleus (STN): Modulatory role.
- Substantia Nigra (SNc, SNr): SNc (dopamine); SNr (output).
- Core Functions: Motor control (initiation/suppression of movement), procedural learning, habit formation, cognition.
- Circuitry: Forms loops with cerebral cortex and thalamus.
⭐ Parkinson's Disease: Caused by loss of dopaminergic neurons in Substantia Nigra pars compacta (SNc).
Basal Ganglia - The Circuit Show

- Function: Modulates motor commands; crucial for movement initiation, suppression, procedural learning, and habit formation.
- Key Pathways:
- Direct (GO): Cortex ➔ Striatum (D1) ➔ GPi/SNr ➔ Thalamus ➔ Cortex.
- Effect: Disinhibits thalamus, leading to increased cortical excitation → ↑Movement.
- SNc (Dopamine via D1): Stimulates this pathway.
- Indirect (NO-GO): Cortex ➔ Striatum (D2) ➔ GPe ➔ STN ➔ GPi/SNr ➔ Thalamus ➔ Cortex.
- Effect: Further inhibits thalamus, leading to decreased cortical excitation → ↓Movement.
- SNc (Dopamine via D2): Inhibits this pathway.
- Direct (GO): Cortex ➔ Striatum (D1) ➔ GPi/SNr ➔ Thalamus ➔ Cortex.
- Net Dopamine Effect (SNc via nigrostriatal pathway): Facilitates movement by enhancing Direct & suppressing Indirect pathways.
⭐ Lesion of the Subthalamic Nucleus (STN) results in contralateral hemiballismus (violent, flinging movements).
Basal Ganglia - Movement & More
- Core Function: Regulates voluntary movement, procedural learning, habit formation, cognition, emotion.
- Motor Control:
- Initiates & scales desired movements.
- Suppresses unwanted/competing movements.
- Maintains muscle tone.
- Key Pathways & Dopamine's Role:
- Direct (D1 receptors): Facilitates movement (GO!). Dopamine excites.
- Indirect (D2 receptors): Inhibits movement (NO-GO!). Dopamine inhibits.
- Beyond Motor: Involved in reward processing, motivation, working memory, and eye movements.
⭐ Lesions cause movement disorders: Parkinson's (hypokinetic, ↓Dopamine) & Huntington's (hyperkinetic).
Basal Ganglia - Disorder Drama

- Parkinson's Disease (PD): Substantia Nigra pars compacta (SNc) degeneration → Dopamine (DA) ↓.
- Symptoms: TRAP (Tremor, Rigidity, Akinesia/Bradykinesia, Postural instability). Lewy bodies present.
- Huntington's Disease (HD): Autosomal dominant. CAG repeat expansion (HTT gene).
- Striatal atrophy (Caudate & Putamen). GABA ↓, Acetylcholine (ACh) ↓, relative DA ↑.
- Symptoms: Chorea, dementia, psychiatric disturbances.
- Hemiballismus: Subthalamic Nucleus (STN) lesion (often vascular).
- Contralateral violent, involuntary, flinging movements of limbs.
- Wilson's Disease: ATP7B gene mutation → Copper accumulation.
- Hepatolenticular degeneration. Kayser-Fleischer rings in cornea.
- Dystonia: Sustained or intermittent muscle contractions causing abnormal movements/postures.
- Tourette Syndrome: Multiple motor tics and at least one vocal tic.
⭐ In Huntington's Disease, atrophy of the caudate nucleus and putamen (striatum) is a hallmark pathological finding, particularly affecting medium spiny neurons projecting to the GPe (indirect pathway).
Basal Ganglia - Arteries & Messengers
- Arteries:
- Caudate/Putamen: Lenticulostriate As. (MCA); Caudate (head): Heubner's A. (ACA).
- Globus Pallidus: Ant. Choroidal A., Lenticulostriate As. (MCA).
- Subthalamic Nucleus (STN): PCA, PCoA.
- Substantia Nigra (SN): PCA, Basilar A. perforators.
- Messengers:
- Striatum: GABA, ACh; Substance P (direct pathway), Enkephalin (indirect pathway).
- SNc: Dopamine (modulatory).
- STN: Glutamate (excitatory, +).
- GPi/SNr (Output): GABA (inhibitory, -).
⭐ Lenticulostriate arteries (from MCA) are common sites for hypertensive bleeds, often termed "Charcot's artery of cerebral hemorrhage".
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Basal ganglia include Striatum (Caudate + Putamen), Globus Pallidus, Subthalamic Nucleus, and Substantia Nigra.
- Crucial for motor control: Direct pathway (D1) facilitates movement; Indirect pathway (D2) inhibits movement.
- Dopamine from SNpc excites direct (D1) & inhibits indirect (D2) pathways.
- Parkinson's Disease: ↓Dopamine (SNpc loss) causes bradykinesia, rigidity, tremor.
- Huntington's Disease: Striatal GABAergic loss (indirect pathway) causes chorea.
- Key neurotransmitters: GABA (inhibitory), Glutamate (excitatory), Acetylcholine (striatal, opposes dopamine).
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