Tectospinal tract
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Tectospinal tract | |
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Diagram showing possible connection of long descending fibers from higher centers with the motor cells of the ventral column through association fibers. ("Tectospinal fasciculus" labeled at center right.) | |
Diagram of the principal fasciculi of the spinal cord. ("Tectospinal fasciculus" labeled at center right, in red.) | |
Latin | t. tectospinalis |
Gray's | subject #185 760 |
Dorlands/Elsevier | t_15/12817309 |
The tectospinal tract (also known as colliculospinal tract) is part of the indirect extrapyramidal tract and is responsible for coordinating head and eye movements.
It is responsible for impulses that are motor.
These impulses arise from one side of the midbrain to muscles on the opposite side of the body.
The portion of the midbrain from where this tract originates is the superior colliculus, which receives afferents from the visual nuclei (primarily the oculomotor nuclei complex), then projects to the contralateral portion of the spinal cord.
The tract descends to the cervical spinal cord to terminate in Rexed laminae VI, VII, and VIII to coordinate head, neck, and eye movements, primarily in response to visual stimuli.