The Corticospinal Tract Top
The main motor pathway, responsible for the execution of voluntary movements, begins in the motor cortex and is called the corticospinal tract.
The size of this projection is large enough to be traced by dissection of the brain, and these nerve fibres pass through the corona radiata to the internal capsule, the cerebral peduncle, the pons and medulla.
In the medulla 90% of the fibres cross to the opposite side in the decussation of the pyramids then pass down the lateral columns to reach the motoneurones on the side of the spinal cord opposite the motor cortex (the Lateral Corticospinal Tract).
It is because of this decussation in the pyramids of the medulla that a lesion in the internal capsule causes paralysis on the opposite side of the body.
Another name for the corticospinal tract is the Pyramidal Tract (because the axons pass through the pyramids).
A smaller percentage of the descending fibres form the anterior corticospinal tract within the spinal cord, and pass down the cord ipsilaterally before crossing the midline at a segmental level to innervate the contralateral motoneurones. |