Somatosensation l (neuro) Flashcards

1
Q

Somatosensory system

A
  • the somatosensory system conveys sensations from the body
  • sensations such as:
    • Touch
    • Proprioception
    • Heat, cold
    • Pain, itch
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2
Q

Peripheral nerves

A
  • spinal and cranial peripheral nerves

- The CNS (brain and spinal cord) is connected to the body via spinal (31 pairs) and cranial nerves

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3
Q

Peripheral nerve structure

A
  • Think of a nerve as a bundle of axons ensheathed in connective tissue
  • Epineurium is the connective tissue ensheathing the whole nerve
  • Within the nerve axon bundles may be in separate fascicles surrounded by perineurium connective tissue sheath
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4
Q

Dorsal root ganglion cells

A
  • Dorsal root ganglion cells are the sensory receptors of the somatosensory system
  • Broadly, two anatomically and functionally distinct systems
    • Large fibres (large diameter, myelinated, fast conduction): tactile and proprioceptive
    • Small fibres (small diameter, thinly-myelinated or unmyelinated, medium or slow conducting): temperature, pain, itch, crude touch
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5
Q

Quality of sensation

A
  • Quality of sensation depends on afferent fibre type
  • Specificity e.g., mechanosensitive fibre insensitive to thermal stimulation
  • Thermosensitive fibres sensitive to warming or cooling
  • Example of cold receptor responding to skin cooling from 34 to 26 °C (A) and warming back to 34°C (B)
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6
Q

Receptors of the somatosensory

system

A
  • Proprioception:
    • A-α afferents: large diameter, myelinated, fastest conducting (≤100 m/s), Muscle spindles
  • Tactile afferents (discriminative touch)
    • A-β afferents: large diameter, myelinated, 2nd fastest conducting (30-70 m/s).
  • They include:
    • superficial:
    Meissner’s corpuscles
    Merkel’s discs
    • deep:
    Ruffinni corpuscles
    Pacinian corpuscles
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7
Q
Receptors of the 
somatosensory system (2)
A
  • Free nerve endings (low-resolution tactile, temperature, pain)
    • A delta fibres: small diameter, thinly myelinated, moderate
    conduction velocity (≤30 m/s)
    • C fibres: small diameter, unmyelinated, slow conducting (≤1
    m/s)
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8
Q

Receptive fields

A
  • ability to localise depends on sensory receptive fields
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9
Q

Major pathways of somatosensory system

A
  • Dorsal column – medial lemniscal system (DCML):
    • mediates discriminative touch, vibration, proprioception
    • Inputs from A-β and A-α afferent fibres
  • Spinothalamic tract (STT, also known as
    anterolateral system):
    • coarse touch, temperature, pain
    • Inputs from A-δ and C fibres
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10
Q

Regional variation in cortical

cytoarchitecture

A
  • Different areas of cortex have the same basic cell types organized in layers, with the same basic organization
  • regional differences can be identified on the basis of relative thickness of the different layers, cell size and density (cytoarchitectural differences)
  • Brodmann defined and numbered over 50 areas in human cortex based on subtle cytoarchitectural differences
  • Many Brodmann areas now associated with function: Brodmann areas 1,2&3 comprise somatosensory cortex
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