Chapter 13 Part 1) PNS Flashcards

1
Q

Structres In the PNS

A
  • All nerual Structures outside brain and Spinal Chord
    • Sensory Receptors
    • Afferent and Efferent Nerves and their Ganflia
    • Motor Endings
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2
Q

Sensory Receptors

A
  • Specialized to respond to changes in the environment (stimuli)
    • Triggers nerve impule with a graded potential
  • Awarness of Stimulus (sensation) and interpretation of meaning of stimlus (perception) occur in brain
  • Three ways to classify receptors
    • Type of Stimulus
    • Body location
    • Structural Complexity
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3
Q

Sensory Receptors by Stimilus type

A
  • Mechanoreceptors
    • respond to touch, pressure, vibration, and stratch
  • Thermoreceptors
    • sensitive to changes in temperature
  • Photoreceptors
    • respond to light energy (example: retina)
  • Chemoreceptors
    • Respond to chemicals (smell, taste, changes in internal chemistry)
  • Nociceptors
    • Senestive to Pain Causing Stimuli
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4
Q

Sensory Recepetors by Locaction

A
  • Exteroceptors
    • Stimilus outside body
    • Receptors in skin for touch, pressure, pain and temprature
    • Most receptors of our special senses (vision, tate, hearing, smell, equilibrium)
  • Interoceptors (Visceroreceptors)
    • Respond to stililus from organs and blood vescels
    • Senative to chemical change, tissue stretch, and tempratue change
    • Sometimes cause doscomfort because person is unaware of workings around them,
  • Proprioceptors
    • Inform brain of ones own movment (proprioception)
    • Respond to muscles, tendons and joints
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5
Q

Sensory Recepors by Stucture

A
  • Simple Receptors = General Senses
    • Modified dendritic endings of sensory nuerons
    • Found throuought the body and moniter most general sensory info
  • Modified Receptors = Special Senses
    • Vison, hearing, equalibrium, smell, and taste
    • All found in complex sense organs
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6
Q

Noncapsualated Nerve (free) endings

A
  • Abundent in Epithelia Tissue and CT
  • Most are nonmyelinated, small diameter fibers
  • Respond mostly to changes in Temprature and pain.
    • some respond to pressure
  • Temprature
    • Respond to cold temp (10-40 degrees C) superficial dermis
    • Respond to heat (32 to 48 degrees C) deeper dermis
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7
Q

Ensapsulated Nerve Endings

A
  • Almost all are Mechanoreceptors with a termial encased in connective tissue
  • Diffrent Types
    • Tactile (Meissner’s) corpusles) small receptors involved in discriminative touch
      • Found in sensative epodermos areas
    • Lamellar (Pacinian) Corpsules) Resond to deep pressure and vibration when applied
      • turn off after a while
    • Bulbous Corpuscles (Ruffini Endings) Respond to deep and continous pressure. Found in dermis and hypodermis
    • Muscle Spindles) Proprioceptors that resond to muscle stretch in skeletal muscle
    • Tendon Organ) Proprioceptors in Tendon that detect streatch
    • Joint kinesthetic receptors) Proprioceptors that moniter joint position and motion
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8
Q

Sensory Processing

A
  • Our Survival depends on
    • Sensation) awarness of change in internal and external environment
    • Perception) Interpretation of Sensation
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9
Q

Somatosensory system

A
  • The part of sensory system serving the body wall and limbs
  • Recives input from
    • Ecteroceptors
    • Interoceptors
    • Proprioceptors
  • Input is relayed toward head but processed along the way
  • Three levels of processing
    • Receptor level) at receprto
    • Circut Level) in ascending pathways
    • Perceptual Level) in cortical sensory areas.
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10
Q

Processing at the Receptor Level

A
  • First a Stimilus must exite a receptor and the AP must reach CNS
  • For this to happen
  1. Stimulus energy must match receptor
    • Touch receptors will not respond to light
  2. Stililus must be applied withinn a sensors receptive feild
    • Smaller the feild= better ability to localize site
  3. Tranduction must occur
    • Energy of stimilus is converted into graded potetial
    • Generator potential) general receptors
    • Receptor potential) special sense receptor
  4. Graded Potenial must cross threshold to generate AP
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11
Q

Adaptation of Sensory Receptors

A
  • Change in sensitivity in the presance of a constant stimulus
    • Eyes ajusting to outside light is example
  • Receptor Membranes become less responsive and potentials decline in frequency or stop.
  • Two Types
    • Phasic Receptors (fast-adapting)
    • Tonic Receptors) Adapt slowly or not at all
      • Nociceptor and most propioceptors
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12
Q

Processing at the Circut Level

A
  • Pathways of Three Nuerons conduct sensory impuleses received from receptors upward to appropriate cortucal regions
    • First Order Sensory Nuerons) Conduct impulses from receptor to spinal level or second order nueron in CNS
    • Second Order Sensory Nuerons) Transmit impules to Third Order Nuerons (Internuerons)
    • Third Order Sensory Nuerons) Conduct Impulses from Thalamus to Stomosensory cortex (perception)
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13
Q

Processing at the Perceptual Level

A
  • Interpretaion of Sensory Stimilus depends on the location of the nuerons in the Sensory Cortex (brain)
  • Aspects of Sensory Perception
    • Perceptual Detection) ability to detect a stimlus (summation)
    • Magnitude Estimation) Ability to detect how intense a stimilus is
    • Spatial Discrimination) Ability to determine the site or pattern of stimilus
    • Feature Abstraction) Indentifcation of several stimulus properites (ex: texture of velvet is diffrent than texture of linnen)
    • Quality Discrimination) able to identify submodalitys of a sensation (ex; Sweet vs sour, loud vs quiet)
    • Pattern Recoginition) Recognition of familiar or signifigant patterns
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14
Q

Perception of Pain

A
  • Warning of Impending or Current Tissue damage
    • occurs so preventative actions can be taken
  • Pain Receptors are activated by
    • Extreme Pressure and Temprature changes
    • Chemicals released frominjured tissue
  • Nuerotransmiters that iniate pain resposne
    • Glutamate and Substance P
  • Pain Suppresion
    • The brain can supress pain with opoids such as endorphins and enkephalins
    • Descending fibers release enkephalins; an inhibitory nuerotranmitter
  • Pain Tolerance
    • We all percive pain at the same intensity, but our tolerance to pain differs from person to person
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15
Q

Phantom Limb Pain

A
  • Long Lasting or Intense pain can lead to hyperglasia (pain amplification)
    • Spinal chord will “learn” hyperaglesia and will send pain signals even if not there
    • This is why early pain managment is critical
  • Phantom Limb Pain
    • Pain felt in limb that has been amputated due to hyperalgesia
    • Due to spinal chord still reveiving pain signals during amputation
    • Epidural Anesthetics are now used to block nuerotranmison in the spinal chord which reduces the likliness of phantom limb pain.
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16
Q

Visceral and Referred Pain

A
  • Visceral Pain) results from stimulation of visceral organ receptors
    • Felt as aching, gnawing, bruning
    • Activated when tissues streath, chemicals release, and muscle spasms.
  • Referred Pain) Pain from one body region perceived as coming from a diffrent region
    • Visceral and Somatic fibers travel on same nerve so the brain can confuse visceral pain as coming from a common somatic area
    • EX) heart attack pain felt in left arm
17
Q

Structure of a Nerve

A
  • Nerve) Cordlike organ found in PNS
    • Bunde of myelinated and unmylinated axons enclosed in CT
  • Classified as either Spinal or Cranial depending on origin
  • Connective Tissuse Coverings
    • Endonuerium) Loose CT that enclosed axons and myelin sheaths
    • Perineurium) Coarse CT that bundles fibers into Fasicles
    • Epineurium) Tough Fibrous Sheath around all fassicles which forms a nerve
18
Q

Structure and Classification of Nerves

A
  • Most Nerves are mixtures of Afferent and Efferet fibers and Somatic and Autonomic (visceral) fibers.
  • Classified accoring to direction impules move
  • Types of Nerves
    • Mixed Nerves) Both Sensory and Motor Fiber. Send impules to and from CNS
    • Sensory (affrent) Nerves) sends impules only to CNS
    • Motor (efferent) Nerves) receives impules from CNS
      • Pure Sensory or Motor are rare, Most are mixed
  • Types of Fibers in Mixed Nerves
    • Somatic Afferent (Muscle Sensory receptors to CNS)
    • Somatic Efferent (Motor cortex in CNS to muscle)
    • Visceral Afferent (Visceral sensory receptors to CNS)
    • Visceral Efferent (Motor area in CNS to organs)
19
Q

Ganglia

A
  • Ganglia contain Nueron Cell Bodies associated with nerves in PNS
  • Afferent Nerve Fibers
    • Dorsal root ganglia (Sensory)
    • contain sensory nuerons
  • Efferent Nerve Fibers
    • Ventral root ganglia
    • Cotain Motor nuerons
20
Q

Regeneration of Nerve Fibers

A
  • Nuerons are amitotic but if soma (cell body) is intace reganeration may occur
  • CNS Axons) Will not regenerate. This is why spinal chord injuries are devestating and paralysis occurs
    • Oligodendrocytes contain growth-inhibiting protiens
  • PNS axons) Will regenrate if damage is not severe
    1. Axon Fragmans and Mylin Sheaths distal to injury degenerate
      • Spreads down axon
    2. Macrophages clean up dead axon debris; Schwann cells begin to divide
    3. Axon Filaments grow through regenreation tube
    4. Axon regeneartes and new myelin sheath forms
  • The greater the distance between severed ends the worse the chance of regenration is
21
Q

Cranial Nerves

A
  • Twelve nerves associated with the brian (I to X11)
    • most are mixed, two are sensory
  • On occasion, our trusty truck acts funny—very good
    vehicle anyhow. (Memonic)
22
Q

Olfactory Nerve (I)

A
  • Sensory) Nerves of sense of smell
  • Location
    • Run from nasal mucosa to olfactory bulbs
    • Pass through cribriform plate of ethmoid bone
    • Fibers synapse in olfactory bulbs
    • Pathway terminates in primary olfactory cortex
  • Purley Sensory (Olfaction)
    • carry afferent impules for smell.
23
Q

Optic Nerves (II)

A
  • Purley Sensory (Visual)
  • Origin) Retinas
  • Pass through opic canals and cross over at optic chaisma
  • Synapse in thalamus, then fibers run to Visual Cortex
24
Q

The Oculomotor Nerves (III)

A
  • Purly Motor
    • raises eyelids, directing eyeball
    • Constricts iris and controls lense shape (parasympathetic)
  • Fibers extend from ventral midbrain through superior orbital fissures to eye muscles
25
Q

Trochlar Nerve (IV)

A
  • Purly motor
    • Primary motor nerve that directs eyeball
    • Innervates one of the superior oblique muslces
  • Fibers orginate in Dorsal midbrain and enters orbit via superior orbital fissue
26
Q

Trigeminal Nerves (V)

A
  • Mixed Nerve. Three divisons
    • Opthalimic (V1) Sensory impules from areas of the face
      • Passes through superior orbital fissures
    • Maxillary (V2) Sensory impules from area of face
      • Passes through framen rotundum
    • Mandibular (V3) Mastication
      • Passes through froamen ovale.
  • Largest cranial Nerve. Orginates at Pons
27
Q

Abducens Nerves

A
  • Primarily Motor) moves eye muscle
    • Innervates the Lateral Rectus Muscle in eye
28
Q

Facial Nerves (VII)

A
  • Mixed Motor Nerve
    • Motor) Facial expression, i
      • Impluses to tear and salivary glands (parasumpathetic)
    • Sensory) Taste, convays sensory impules from anterior two-thirds of tounge.
  • Mixed nerve with five pathways
    • Temporal, Zygomatic, Buccal, Mandibular, and Cervical
29
Q

The Vestibulocochlear Nerves (VIII)

A
  • Mixed Nerve
    • MOSTLY SENSORY) hearing receptors and equilibrium receptors
    • small motor componant for adjsutment of sensors
  • Fibers orginate from receptors and pass through innear ear at acusitic meatisus and insert on brain stem at pons/medulla border
  • Formally the auditory nerve
30
Q

The Glossopharyngeal Nerves (IX)

A
  • Mixed Nerve
    • Motor function) innervate part of tounge and pharynx for swallowing
      • Provide parasympathetic fibers to activate salivary glands
    • Sensory Funtion) Taste and general impules from pharune and posterior tounge
      • Impules from chemoreceptors and baroreceptors
  • Fibers Run from Medulla through the jugular froamen and run to the throat.
31
Q

Vagus Nerves (X)

A
  • Only Nerve that Leaves head
  • Fibers run from medulla and exit via jugular froamen to heart, lungs, and abdominal viscera
  • Mixed Nerve
    • Motor Functions) Parasympathetic activities of heart, lungs, and abdominal organs
    • Sensory Funtion) Impules from thoracic and abdominl organs
      • Baroreceptors, chemoreceptors, and tastebuds of posterior tounge and pharynx (same as IX)
32
Q

Accessory Nerves

A
  • Mostly Motor Function
    • Innerviates Trapezius and Sternocleoidmastoic muscles
  • Orginated from ventral rootlets of C1-C5 region of spinal chord. Rootlets go up each froamen magnum and exit via the jugular froman and insert on the mucles mentioned.
33
Q

Hypoglossal Nerve (XII)

A
  • Motor Function
    • Innerviate mucles of tounge that contribute to speach and swallowing
  • Fibers exit medulla via hypoglossal canal.
34
Q

Composition Of Cranial Nerves

A
  • Special Sensory
    • Olfactory and Optic Nerves
  • Sensory Nuerons
    • V,VII, IX, X
  • To remember primary functions as motor, sensory or both
    • “Some say marry money, but my brother believes (it’s) bad business (to) marry money.”