Frontal lobe motor syndromes

Handb Clin Neurol. 2023:196:443-455. doi: 10.1016/B978-0-323-98817-9.00008-9.

Abstract

The motor phenomena accompanying frontal lobe disease are diverse, reflecting the various roles the frontal lobes play in the organization of motor control. The principal frontal motor areas, the primary motor cortex, the premotor cortex, and the supplementary motor area, have different but interrelated functions in motor control. The principal efferent pathway of the primary motor cortex is the corticospinal tract which conducts fine motor control. Damage to the primary motor cortex and the corticospinal tract results in paralysis and loss of skilled, particularly distal, motor function. Lesions of the premotor cortex interfere with the preparation for the execution of movements and coordinating sequences of limb movement. Mediated through cortico-reticulospinal pathways, the premotor cortex adjusts axial and limb muscle activities. The fine motor skills of the corticospinal tract are superimposed upon these stabilizing movements. Supplementary motor area lesions interrupt self-initiated movements, release alien limb behaviors, and result in grasping. Paralysis, primitive reflexes, and frontal gait disorders are readily observed on examination, but difficulties initiating and sequencing movements are more subtle signs of perturbed higher motor control and require special examination procedures. Prefrontal motor syndromes include motor behaviors that only become apparent when the subject performs spontaneous or self-directed activities, unconstrained by instructions from the examiner. Clinical observation also reveals a slowness to respond to instruction with long delays before initiating action (inertia), but once underway they may be unable to stop (perseveration). Patients sit motionless without spontaneous movement or interest in their surrounds (apathy), yet exhibit distractibility, diverting attention to an incidental peripheral stimulus or an object with which they may then fiddle (environmental dependency and utilization behavior). Little spontaneous speech is initiated (abulia) but echolalia may be stimulated by the examiner's conversation. Restlessness, distractibility, perseveration, and environmentally dependent utilization behaviors coexist with apathy, inertia, and abulia. Mutism and akinesia may alternate with stereotypies and agitation in catatonia. These paradoxical combinations are of considerable diagnostic significance in recognizing frontal lobe motor syndromes.

Keywords: Alien limb; Frontal gait disorder; Frontal motor syndromes; Grasp reflexes; Perseveration; Spasticity; Stereotypies; Utilization behavior.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Apathy*
  • Frontotemporal Dementia*
  • Humans
  • Motor Cortex*
  • Paralysis
  • Syndrome