The pathway from the spinal cord to the cerebellum takes different courses, depending on whether the upper or lower limbs are being considered.
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The Dorsal Spino-cerebellar Tract
The afferent pathways from the lower half of the body concerned with kinaesthesia enter the dorsal columns and ascend to Clarke's nucleus, where the afferents synapse on second order neurones. These project rostrally on the same side of the cord to reach the cerebellum.
The ventral spinocerebellar tract conveys runs in parallel with the dorsal tract in a functional sense, in that each consist of two neurones in series, and both have an inspilateral relationship between the cord and the cerebellum.
However the ventral tract takes a more circuitous route, crossing to the opposite side of the cord in the anterior commissure, then crossing again in the brainstem - thus performing a double crossover.
Clarke's nucleus extends from C8 - L2/L3 and is sometimes called Clarke's Column, or the Nucleus Dorsalis. Afferents from the upper limb therefore enter the cord above the rostral end of the column.
As Clarke's nucleus does not extend above C8, the dorsal spinocerebellar tract does not convey information from the upper limb.
Afferents from the Upper Limb travel rostrally in the dorsal columns and synapse in the accessory cuneate nuclei, which project to the same side of the cerebellum. This pathway for proprioceptive information from upper limbs is sometimes called the cuneocerebellar tract. |