Rubrospinal tract
| Rubrospinal tract | |
|---|---|
Rubrospinal tract is labeled in red on the left of the diagram. | |
Schematic representation of the chief ganglionic categories (Rubrospinal tract not labeled, but red nucleus visible near center) | |
| Details | |
| Identifiers | |
| Latin | tractus rubrospinalis |
| NeuroLex ID | birnlex_1476 |
| TA98 | A14.1.02.220 A14.1.04.136 A14.1.05.332 A14.1.06.213 |
| TA2 | 6097 |
| FMA | 73995 |
| Anatomical terminology | |
The rubrospinal tract is one of the descending tracts of the spinal cord. It is a motor control pathway that originates in the red nucleus.[1] It is a part of the lateral indirect extrapyramidal tract.
The rubrospinal tract fibers are efferent nerve fibers from the magnocellular part of the red nucleus. (Rubro-olivary fibers are efferents from the parvocelluar part of the red nucleus).[2]
It is functionally less important in humans.[3] It is involved in motor control of distal flexors of the upper limb—especially of the hand and fingers[4]—by promoting flexor tone while inhibiting extensors.[3]
- ^ Betts, J. Gordon; Young, Kelly A.; Wise, James A. (25 April 2013). "Ch. 14 Key Terms - Anatomy and Physiology | OpenStax". openstax.org.
- ^ Haines, Duane E.; Mihailoff, Gregory A. (2018). Fundamental neuroscience for basic and clinical applications (5th ed.). Philadelphia: Elsevier. p. 189. ISBN 9780323396325.
- ^ a b Patestas, Maria A.; Gartner, Leslie P. (2016). A Textbook of Neuroanatomy (2nd ed.). Hoboken, New Jersey: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 241–244. ISBN 978-1-118-67746-9.
- ^ Patestas, Maria A.; Gartner, Leslie P. (2016). A Textbook of Neuroanatomy (2nd ed.). Hoboken, New Jersey: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 109–114. ISBN 978-1-118-67746-9.