2. Somatosensory 2 Flashcards

1
Q

fast pain:

receptor, fiber type, tracts

A
  1. mechanical and thermal nocioceptors
  2. small myleinated fibers
  3. neospinothalamic tract
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2
Q

slow pain:

receptor, fiber type, tracts

A
  1. polymodal nocioceptors
  2. unmyelinated fiber
  3. paleospinothalamic, and spinoreticulothalamic tracts
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3
Q

FAST PAIN:

thalamus, cortex, and fxn

A
  • lateral VPL (in thalamus)
  • primary somatosensory cortex
  • sharp, localized pain
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4
Q

SLOW PAIN:

thalamus, cortex, and fxn

A
  1. medial thalamus
  2. frontal and limbic lobes of cortex
  3. cortical arousal, affect
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5
Q

nociception:

define, and biomechanical features

A
  • tissue damage from mechanical trauma
  • proteases
    • breakdown kininogen to bradykinin (causing slow contraction, involved in inflammation)
    • bradykinin bind to receptors that activate ion channels
  • ATP: binds to ATP-gated ion channels
  • K+: depolarized neuron membranes
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6
Q

stimuli of nociception?

A
  • tissue damage from mechanical trauma
  • temperature extremes (heat over 43 degrees –> heat-senstivie ion channels open)
  • oxygen deprivation
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7
Q

biochem of oxygen deprivation and nociception

A
  • w/ oxygen deprivation (anoxia) –> anaerobic metabolism releases lactic acid
  • lactic acid –> high levels of H+ ions
  • activation of H+ gated ion channels on nociceptors
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8
Q

types of nociceptors

A
  • polymodal (mechanical, thermal, & chemical stimuli)
  • mechanical nociceptors - strong pressure
  • thermal nociceptors
  • chemical nociceptors
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9
Q

capsaicin:

function

A
  1. activates TRPV1 receptor –> which channels open at lower temperatures
  2. results in inflammation-induced thermal hyperalgesia
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10
Q

hyperalgesia:

define

A

a condition where a person develops an increased sensitivity to pain

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11
Q

key characteristics of pain & temperature fibers

A
  • A-delta (type III) fibers
  • larger diameter, lightly/thinly myelinatied
  • fast conduction
  • sharp, prickly pain
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12
Q

key characteristics of slow pain and temperaure

A
  • C (type IV) fibers
  • smaller diameter, UNMYELINATED; polymodal
  • slower conduction
  • dull, burning, poorly localized pain
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13
Q

which fibers are associated with the first pain after noxious stimulus?

which fibers are with second pain?

A
  1. First pain: A-delta (fast; sharp/prickly pain fibers) - more intense pain
  2. Second pain: C fibers (slow, dull burning pain) - less intense pain
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14
Q

ascending pathways of pain include:

A
  1. information from receptors –>
  2. spinal cord –>
  3. ascend thru spinal cord –>
  4. ascend thru brainstem –>
  5. head somatosensory information –>
  6. to thalamus –>
  7. to cortex
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15
Q

ascending pathway from receptors are important for which 2 key functions

A
  1. position of body in space (w/in the environment)
  2. arousal
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16
Q

ALS (anterolateral system) aka Spinothalamic pathway:

functions

A
  • pain
  • temperature
  • itch
  • touch (less so)
17
Q

anterolateral system (spinothalamic pathway):

structure (input, relay nuclei, decussation)

A
  1. sensory input: thermo, noci, and itch receptors
  2. relay nuclei: spinal cord
  3. decussation: occurs in spinal cord –> then ascends to ALS pathway
18
Q

Synapses of the Anterolateral System

(Spinothalamic pathway)

A

Synapses

  1. VPL thalamus to primary somatic sensory cortex
  2. Ventromedial posterior to primary somatic sensory cortex & insular cortex
  3. Medial dorsal thalamus to cingulate gyrus (assoc. w/ emotions)
  4. Intralaminar nuclei
19
Q

what enters the dorsal root entry zone?

A

pain fibers enter the dorsal root entry zone laterally

20
Q

which neurons enter the DC/ML of dorsal root entry zone?

what about the ALS system?

A
  • DC/ML: has heavily myelinated neurons (think: fast pain)
  • ALS: has lightly myelinated neurons (think: slow conduction, slow pain)
21
Q

what is another name for the dorsal root entry zone?

and where is it found?

A

Zone of Lissauer: a small strand situated in relation to the tip of the posterior column close to the entrance of the posterior nerve roots;

spinal cord gray matter

22
Q

overview of anterolateral spinothalamic tract

A
  • these axons are located in the anterolateral tract, which extends from the lateral into the anterior funiculus of the spinal cord
  • axons ascend the brainstem
  • axons then cross the midline and ascend the spinal cord
23
Q

where does pain/temp information from LEFT SIDE OF THE BODY ascend?

A

to the RIGHT side of the spinal cord;

due to decussation between brainstem/spinal cord

(info travels on the opposite side)

24
Q

dorsal root ganglion neurons:

define

A

primary afferent neurons that transmit info. from peripheral receptors into the spinal cord

25
Q

comparison of PWC-ML and ALS systems

A
  • PWC-ML system: neuron #1’s axons at Dorsal Root entry zone and in fasiculus gracilis and fasiculus cuneatus
    • dorsal white column on same side
  • ALS system: neuron #1 at dorsal root entry zone; cell bodies in the dorsal horn; axons in anterior white commissure
    • then contralateral anterolateral tract (ALS)
26
Q

what are some inputs to the 2nd order neuron?

A

mechanoreceptors and interneurons

27
Q

gate theory

A

by stim larger diameter fibers, to synapse on interneuron in dorsal horn –> to inhibit the second order neuron from firing

28
Q

ascending in the spinal cord:

where do second order neurons ascend contralaterally?

where do these synapse?

A
  • Second order neurons ascend contralaterally in the:
    • medulla
    • pons
    • midbrain
  • synapse in the thalamus, but spinothalamics synapse in the VP nucleus
29
Q

spinoreticular tract (spinoreticulothalamic)

define and function

A
  • indirect pathway
  • info to the reticular nuclei which project to the intralaminar nuclei of the thalamus
  • fxn: important in arousal
30
Q

spinomesencephalic tract (paleospinothalamic):

define and function

A
  • indirect pathway
  • info to midbrain tectum –> fxn: coordinate eye & head mvmts
  • info to periaqueductal gray matter (PAG) –> fxn: pain regulation
31
Q

w/in the spinal cord, how do the ALS and DC-ML pathways differ?

A

they are on opposite sides, but meet in caudal medulla;

DC-ML pathway stays on same side as stimulus until crossing over at medulla

ALS pathway crosses over at dorsal root axon

32
Q

CC: brown-sequard syndrome

mechanisms and symptoms

A

caused by: hemisection of spinal cord

sxs:

  • loses pain from the opposite side of the body, about 2 levels below the lesion
  • loses touch etc. on the same side of the body as the lesion
33
Q

where does spinomesencephalic tract project to?

A
  • superior colliculus –> orienting to pain stimulus
  • periaqueductal gray –> pain modulation
34
Q

3 key nuclei of thalamus, and overall functions

A
  • 3 nuclei
    • posterior thalamic nuclei
    • medial dorsal nucleus
    • intralaminar nuclei
  • Fxn: plays a role in affective and motivational aspects of pain and in the memory of painful stimuli
35
Q

where in the cortex is the painful stimuli recorded?

A

insular cortex, and the anterior cingulate

(insular cortex is found between the temporal and frontal lobes)

36
Q

cortical projections from layers 5 & 6:

project to, function

A
  • project to:
    • thalamus
    • brainstem
    • spinal cord
  • modulate sensory information that is ascending
37
Q

decribe the pain modulation of the nucleus raphe magnus

A
  1. from periaqueductal gray
  2. to nucleus raphe magnus
  3. neurons of Raphe magnus –> project to spinal cord; are serotonergic; and excite interneurons (enkephalinergic, and inhibit 1st & 2nd order pain neurons)
38
Q

decribe the pain modulation of the locus ceruleus

A
  • neurons in LC are noradrenergic
  • excite interneurons; enkephalinergic (which inhibits 1st and 2nd order pain neurons)