Pain & Somatosensory Disorders Flashcards
(45 cards)
Overview of somatosensory system

Sensory receptors are classified into five categories. What are these?
- Chemoreceptors; chemicals
- Thermoreceptors; temperature
- Mechanoreceptors; pressure
- Proprioceptors
- Nociceptor; pain
A number of receptors are distributed throughout the skin to respond to various touch-related stimuli. Name these 4 receptors?
N.B. these are all mechanoreceptors
- Pacinian corpuscle
- Ruffini’s corpuscles
- Merkel’s disks
- Free nerve endings

What are the four major types of tactile mechanoreceptors?
Merkel’s disks, Meissner’s corpuscles, Ruffini endings, and Pacinian corpuscles.
How do mechanoreceptors sense stimuli?
Mechanoreceptors sense stimuli due to physical deformation of their plasma membranes.
What is a free nerve ending? What are they sensitive to?
An unencapsulated dendrite of a sensory neuron; they are the most common nerve endings in skin. Free nerve endings are sensitive to painful stimuli, to hot and cold, and to light touch.
Meissner corpuscles;
a) location?
b) what type of skin?
c) what do they respond to?
d) encapsulated or not?
e) speed of adaptation?
- a) Found in the upper dermis, but they project into the epidermis; sit between the dermal pupillae
- b) Glabrous skin only; fingertips and eyelids
- c) respond to fine touch/pressure and low frequency vibratinos
- d) encapsulated
- e) rapidly adapting
Pacinian corpuscles;
a) location?
b) what type of skin?
c) what do they respond to?
d) encapsulated or not?
e) speed of adaptation?
a) Deep receptors located in subcutaneous tissue
b) Glabrous AND hairy skin
c) Respond to deep transient pressure and high frequency vibration
d) encapsulated
e) rapidly adapting
Ruffini endings;
a) location?
b) what type of skin?
c) what do they respond to?
d) encapsulated or not?
e) speed of adaptation?
- a) located deep in dermis, long axis of the corpuscle is orientated parallel to the skin (20% of receptors in skin)
- b) glabrous AND hairy skin
- c) detect skin stretch and deformations within joints (provide valuable feedback for gripping objects and controlling finger position and movement)
- d) encapsulated
- e) slow adapting
Merkel’s discs;
a) location?
b) what type of skin?
c) what do they respond to?
d) encapsulated or not?
e) speed of adaptation?
- a) found just beneath the epidermis; aligned with the pupillae
- b) hairy AND glabrous skin
- c) respond to light pressure/touch
- d) unencapsulated
- e) slow-adapting
Diagram of sensory receptors in skin

How does the diameter of sensory afferents affect speed of conduction?
General principle;
- Large diameter; rapidly conducting afferents (I/II)
- Small diameter; slow conducting afferents (III/IV)
Conduction velocity is positively correlated with axon diameter.

As a general principle, which receptors are sensory afferents with a large diameter associated with?
With low threshold mechanoreceptors.
As a general principle, which receptors are sensory afferents with a small diameter associated with?
Associated with nociceptors and thermoreceptors
The configuration of the different types of receptors working in concert in the human skin results in a very refined sense of touch. Describe this configuration?
- The nociceptive receptors are located near the surface.
- Small, finely-calibrated mechanoreceptors (Merkel’s disks and Meissner’s corpuscles) are located in the upper layers and can precisely localize even gentle touch.
- The large mechanoreceptors (Pacinian corpuscles and Ruffini endings) are located in the lower layers and respond to deeper touch.
There are 2 types of nociceptive fibres. What are these?
- A delta fibres
- C fibres
What is first pain and second pain?
A single painful stimuli yields two successive and distinct sensations referred to as first and second pain sensation. First pain is brief, pricking, and well localised, whereas second pain is longer-lasting, burning, and less well localised.
Describe first pain. What fibres are involved? What receptors are involved?
- Fast A delta fibres
- Sharp or prickling
- Easily localised
- Occurs rapidly
- Short duration
- Mechanical or thermal nociceptors

Describe 2nd pain. What fibres are involved? What receptors are involved?
- Slow C-fibres
- Dull ache, burning
- Poorly localised
- Slow onset
- Persistent
- Polymodal nociceptors
Describe 1st and 2nd pain when treading on a pin
- The sharp stab is signaled via fast-conducting A-fibers, which project to the somatosensory cortex.
- This part of the cortex is somatotopically organised — the sensory signals are represented according to where in the body they stem from).
- The unpleasant ache you feel after the sharp pin stab is a separate, simultaneous signal sent from the nociceptors in your foot via thin C-pain to brain regions involved in processing of emotion and interoception
What is the primary event in somatosensation?
Generation of an action potential in an afferent fibre ending
Certain regulators of neuronal excitability are specific for nociceptive neurons. What are the 3 Voltage-Gated Sodium Channels that are almost exclusively expressed in nociceptors?
- Nav1.7
- Nav1.8
- Nav1.9
What is congenital insensitivity to pain?
rare disease characterised by inability of experience to feel pain
What is congenital insensitivity to pain (CIP) caused by?
- Mutations within nociceptor-specific Voltage-Gated Sodium Channel Nav1.7
- Inherited in an autosomal recessive pattern






