Peripheral nervous system: afferent division Flashcards

1
Q

Is the afferent input accurate?

A

No, it is not highly accurate: 2 outputs for the same picture/stimulus - not a high fidelity recorder

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2
Q

What is the afferent input essential for controlling?

A

It is essential for control of efferent output

  • it regulates motor control
  • coordinates internal activities for homeostasis
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3
Q

The afferent input processing by reticular activating system is critical for what?

A

arousal and consciousness

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4
Q

What are the five important factors the afferent input is responsible for?
(EPPSI)

A
  • essential for control of efferent output (regulates motor control, coordinates internal activities for homeostasis)
  • processing by reticular activating system critical for arousal and consciousness
  • perception of the environment around us
  • storage for future recall
  • impact emotions
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5
Q

A change detectable by the body, exist in various energy forms (modalities) touch, temp, pain and position

A

stimulus - generate afferent input

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6
Q

What generates an afferent input?

A
  • Stimulus
  • detection of adequate stimuli by receptors (not the same as the receptors on the PM of the cells - don’t transduce signal inside cell)
  • receptors detecting specialized stimuli may be (specialized ending of afferent neurons, separate cell closely associated with peripheral ending of the neuron)
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7
Q

What does generation of afferent input do?

A
  • alters membrane permeability: local depolarization (specialized ending: generator potential, separate cell: receptor potential)
  • graded potentials: strength and duration proportional
  • converted to action potentials: self-propagated to CNS
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8
Q

Where is an AP initiated during receptor stimulation for afferent, efferent, and interneurons?

A

Afferent neuron: peripheral end of the fiber, close to the receptor

Efferent neuron or interneuron: Axon hillock

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9
Q

The intensity of a receptor stimulus depends on?

A

the frequency of action potentials (stronger stimulus, higher AP frequency)

the number of receptors

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10
Q

Tonic receptors (tone)

A

don’t adapt, or adapt slowly
convey valuable info about stimulus, so receptor shouldn’t adapt or the brain wouldn’t receive info (muscles controlling posture & balance)

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11
Q

Stimuli of same intensity does not bring about receptor potentials of the same magnitude from the same receptor

A

adaptaion

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12
Q

Phasic receptors (phase)

A
  • adapts rapidly bby decrease in AP, responds with an off response on removal of stimulus
  • important where change in stimulus intensity is important (touch receptors)

i.e. put on ring or watch, feel it initially but not the rest of the day until you take it off

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13
Q

The mechanism of receptor adaptation is the same for every receptor. True or false?

A

FAlse, the mechanism of adaptation varies for different receptors

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14
Q

Describe the pacinian corpuscle

A
  • onion - has rings of tissues = concentric layers

- detects pressure and vibrations in the skin

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15
Q

How does the pacinian corpuscle rapidly adapt?

A

mechanical component: layers slip (no longer responsive to stimulus)

electrochemical component: inactivation of sodium channels = no action potential

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16
Q

What is a first order transmission of stimulus?

A

transmit sensory info from the periphery to CNS

- there are different types that convey different messages

17
Q

What is a second order transmission of stimulus?

A

ascending pathways

  • reflex activated
  • communicate with various reflex networks and sensory pathways in spinal cord and travel directly to thalamus
18
Q

What is the third order transmission of stimulus?

A

relay info from thalamus to cerebral cortex (sensory homunculus)

19
Q

What are the three types of nerve fibers for transmission?

A

Type A
Type B
Type C

type a and b myelinated
type c unmyelinated

20
Q
Put the following in size order based on diameter largest to smallest:
B
C
Aalpha
A beta
A delta
A

Aalpa (~120m/s) >Abeta > Adelta > B > C (~0.6m/s)

21
Q

What factor do you think affects speed of conduction?

a. thicker myelination
b. greater membrane potential
c. greater diameter
d. stronger AP

A

C

22
Q

How is acuity of sensation influenced? (AKA discriminative ability)

A

receptive field

lateral inhibition

23
Q

What is the receptive field?

A
  • circumscribed area of the skin surrounding the somatosensory neuron
  • acuity is inversely proportional to the receptive field
    (larger field, smaller acuity)
  • small receptive field: more detailed info
  • corresponds with sensory homunculus

i. e. can tell two fingers are on face, can’t differ one from two fingers on calf)
- shopping, first instinct to feel with fingers because it is where discriminative ability is the highest

24
Q

What is lateral inhibition?

A
  • most strongly activated signal pathway (center) inhibits the less excited pathwhays from fringe (strong stimulus inhibit small)
  • facilitates localization and sharpens contrast (how you k now where forced was applied)
  • touch and vision have the most lateral inhibition, so most accurate

(poked with pen)

25
Q

Photoreceptor

A

respond to visible wavelength of light

26
Q

mechanoreceptor

A

sensitive to mechanical energy, baroreceptors (blood pressure)

27
Q

thermoreceptor

A

sensitive to heat and cold, skin

28
Q

osmoreceptor

A

detect changes in the concentration of solute in body fluids

29
Q

chemoreceptor

A

sensitive to specific chemicals, concentration of blood O2

30
Q

nociceptor

A

a pain receptor that is sensitive to tissue damage