Functions of sensory systems; choose WRONG
Monitor the internal and external environment
Transmits signals from CNS to periphery
Control of movement
Transmits peripheral signal to CNS for processing
Regulation of internal organs
Which of these are sensory input under general (somatic) sensation?
Touch
Pain
Vision
Hearing
Smell
Thermal sensation
Proprioception
Taste
Which of these are NOT sensory input under special sensation?
What is true about the senses?
General senses have receptors distributed over a large part of the body
General senses have receptors within specific organs
General senses located in skin, muscle and joints are somatic (touch, pain, temp, etc..)
General senses located in internal organs are visceral (pain and pressure)
Balance is not a special sense
Stages of sensation; choose proper order
Stimulation, Perception, Transduction, Transmission
Stimulation, Transmission, Perception, Transduction
Stimulation, Transduction, Transmission, Perception
Stimulation, Transmission, Transduction, Perception
Receptor types choose correct
Somatic and olfactory senses reception is through secondary sensory neurons
General secondary receptors release neurotransmitter that bind to a neuron that transmits info to brain
Special secondary receptors release neurotransmitter that bind to a neuron that transmits info to brain
In taste, hearing, sight and balance it is through specialized epithelial receptor cells - secondary receptor.
Choose correct match of location and receptor
Exteroreceptors - associated with skin
Proprioceptors - associated with joints, tendons, muscle, vestibular system
Visceroreceptors - associated with organs
Exteroreceptors - associated with organs
Choose correct receptor with the type of activation.
Nociceptors - respond to changes in temperature
Thermoreceptors - extreme mechanical, chemical, or thermal stimuli. Pain sensation
Mechanoreceptors: compression, bending, stretching of cells. Touch, pressure, proprioception, hearing, and balance sensation
Chemoreceptors - chemicals become attached to receptors on their membranes. Smell and taste sensation
Photoreceptors - respond to light. Vision
Division of sensation; choose WRONG
PROPRIOCEPTION – profound
EKSTEROCEPTION – superficial
INTEROCEPTION – special
TELECEPTION – visceral
Which of these are not an attribute of stimulus
Modality (type of sensation; touch, pain)
Location
Intensity
Timing - When stimuli starts
Reflex
Division of sensations; according to the head
EPICRITIC SENSATION – identification, localisation, characteristic, strength of stimulus possible
PROTOPATHIC SENSATION – identification, localisation, characteristic, strength of stimulus possible
PROTOPATHIC SENSATION – impossible precise identification of stimulus; often connected with impairing factors - crude touch, pain, extreme temperature
EPICRITIC SENSATION – impossible precise identification of stimulus; often connected with impairing factors - crude touch, pain, extreme temperature
Modalities of stimulus;
Modality is encoded by a single pathway.
Each pathway encodes one specific sense
Each type of sensation (touch, sound, light, etc.) is called modality of sensation
Different modality of sensation is transmitted by a specific nerve fiber and determined by where the nerve fiber terminates in the brain
Location of stimulus; choose correct
Receptors fires action potential only when stimulus impinges on the receptive field.
Fine resolution requires large receptive fields
Coarse resolution requires fewer receptive fields to cover the same body surface area
Receptive field in skin differ in size and response to touch
Location of stimulus; coarse and fine resolution. Choose correct.
Coarse resolution; Certain regions of the body, such as arms & legs, have such very large receptive fields.
Coarse resolution; Two stimuli separated by as much as 40 mm will be perceived as a single point
Coarse resolution; Sensitive regions of the body with small secondary receptive fields include the fingertips.
Coarse resolution; Two stimuli separated by as little as 2 mm will activate separate pathways and will be perceived as distinct stimuli
Meissner occupy small receptive fields
Paccini occupy large receptive fields
Primary neuron response is improper to stimulus strength
lateral inhibition - adjacent relay cells are inhibited from firing by the excited relay cell
feed forward inhibition - primary sensory cell inhibits directly adjacent relay cells.
Lateral inhibition increases stimulus contrast
Intensity of stimulus;
Population code - more sensory receptors are activated as stimulus gets greater
Intensity is encoded through the firing rate of receptors
Duration of action potential code for underlie perception of stimulus strength
Frequency of the stimulus is encoded by the time course of firing
Timing of stimulus
Duration of the stimulus is encoded by the time course of firing
Phasic receptors - long-lasting stimulus will produce a prolonged repetitive discharge in the primary afferent neurons. (pain)
Phasic reseptors - long-lasting stimulus will produce a short-lived response in the primary afferent neurons.
Tonic receptors are fast-adapting
Which of these are NOT tonic receptors?
Baroreceptors
Paccinian corpuscles
Nociceptors
Poprioceptors
Choose correct match of somatic sensory receptors to its stimuli.
Tactile receptors (mechanoreceptors) - receptors detect position and movement
Thermal receptors - stimuli: heat and cold
Nociceptors - stimuli: painful touch, cut, extreme temperatures
Proprioceptive - stimuli: touch, pressure, vibration
Static proprioceptors - tonic discharge
Static proprioceptors - phasic discharge
Pacini's corpuscle;
Stimulus: deep cutaneous pressure; vibration
Located in epidermis
Lamellated corpuscles, single dendrite to layers of corpuscles arranged like
Pacini's corpuscle is a skin, sensory nerve ending
Slow adapting
Meissner's (tactile) corpuscle
Has a two-point discrimination. Ability to detect simultaneous stimulations at two points on the skin.
Rapidly adapting
Numerous and close together on thigh and chest
Used to determined temp of objects.
Merkel (tactile) disks; Choose WRONG
Axonal branches end as flattened expansions associated with epithelial cells
Responsible for steady-state signals (continuous touch)
Slowly adapting
Basal layers of hypodermis
Light touch and superficial pressure
Ruffini's end organ
Primarily in dermis of fingers
Respond to continuous touch or pressure
Hair follicle receptors
Does not respond to bending of hair as occurs in light touch
Hair end organs
End organ receptor fields overlap; sensation not very localized, yet very sensitive
Respond to bending of hair as occurs in light touch
Free nerve endings; Choose WRONG
Simplest, most common sensory receptor
Scattered through most of body; visceroceptors are of this type.
Picks up warm 10-15 times more numerous than cold
Pain: respons to freezing cold and burning hot, cut of skin, painful touch
Thermal sensation - choose correct
Large receptive area
Warm receptors: up to 30C, max excitability at 44-46C;
Thermal signals are transmitted in pathways same to those for pain signals
Cold receptors: max excitability at 24-28oC;
Warm sensation - Transmission by C fibers
For each 10C change metabolic rates (temp) alters intracellular chemical reactions more than 2-fold.
Cold sensation - Transmission by C fibers
Cold sensation - Transmission by Aδ
Muscle spindle;
Provide information about tension of muscles
3-10 specialized intrafusal skeletal muscle cells
Provide information about length of muscles
Involved in stretch reflex
Golgi tendon organ - Choose wrong
Proprioceptors associated with tendons
Respond to increased tension on tendon
Involved in invers stretch reflex
Stimulus encoding - Choose correct
Lateral inhibition - Key attributes of the stimulus must be represented in the signals of the primary SN
Stimulus transduction - Stimulus energy is converted into electrochemical energy
The stimulus information must be encoded into an electrical signal of some sort. These will result in information about intensity, duration, and location.
Neural encoding - sensory information must be fine tuned to achieve maximal discriminative capacity
Which of these are NOT an organisation of the sensory system?
Parallel pathways
Relay nuclei and Interneurons
Hierarchical organisation - different levels (highest at the head)
Spinal cord and fiber types
Neural maps - Parts of brain for different sensations
Somatosensory transmission - Choose correct
Transmission has specificity and follows topographical organisation
Cross-over to decussate through 2 major pathways; Dorsal column and anterolateral pathway.
Starts in the neurons of dorsal root ganglia
Ends in thalamus nuclei
Classification of sensory nerve fibers - Choose correct match
Ia = Annulo-spiral ending of muscle spindle - A-alpha Fiber
Ia = Golgi tendon organ - A-alpha Fiber
II = Flower-spray ending of muscle spindle - A-beta Fiber
III = Pain, temp and other receptors - Cdr Fiber
Dermatomes; Choose correct
Sensory supply to skin
All impulses from the receptors first enter the peripheral afferent nerve fiber.
After entering the Dorsal Roots it enters spinal ganglion
Terminates in spinal cord
Each dermatome is innervated by 2 segments of the spinal cord.
Somatosensory transmission - Which is NOT a pathway?
Ventral columns
Dorsal columns
Lateral and Anterior spinothalamic tract
Anterior and posterior spinocerebellar tracts
Spino-olivary cerebellar tract and Trigeminothalamic tract
Dorsal columns- Choose correct
Primary neurons have cell bodies in dorsal root ganglion.
Fasciculus gracilis: sensations from inferior to midthoracic level.
Fasciculus gracilis : impulses from above midthorax.
Carries sensations of two-point discrimination, proprioception, pressure, vibration to cerebrum, and cerebellum
Axons enter spinal cord and ascend to the medulla oblongata by decussating where they synapse with secondary neurons.
Lateral spinothalamic tract - Choose correct
Picks up pain and temperature
Follows a 3 neuron system, where the primary neuron starts in dorsal root ganglia
Secondary neuron - thalamus VPL nucleus
Tertiary neuron - posterior horn neuron
Anterior spinothalamic tract picks up which 4 sensations?
Heat
Tickle
Itch
Crude touch
Pressure
Trigemino-thalamic tract - Choose wrong
Fibers join the spinothalamic tract in the brainstem
Involves Cranial nerve VI
In thalamus synapses on VPL nucleus
Carries similar information to that of the spinothalamic and dorsal-column/medial- lemniscal system
Carries info from face, Nasal cavity and Oral cavity
Spino-olivary cerebellar tract - Choose correct
Spino-reticular tract to superior olivary nuclei
Spinal dorsal columns to nuclei of the medulla
Starts as climbing fibers on Purkinje cells
Spino-olivary - contribute to coordination of movement associated with balance
Both impulses from Spino-reticular tract and Spinal dorsal columns go to cerebellum
Anterior and posterior spino-cerebellar tracts - choose correct
Anterior - sensation = Proprioception of muscle, tendon, Joints receptors . Large tactile skin sensation
Anterior - sensation = Efferent copy of the anterior horn motor drive
Posterior - termination = The same side as its origin. Mossy fibers on cerebellar cortex granular cells
Posterior - termination = Both side of cerebellum. Mossy fibers on cerebellar cortex granular cells
Sensory tracts - choose correct
Cerebellum may reduce the conscious perception of sensations
Cortex may reduce the conscious perception of sensations
Spinotectal - involved in reflexes that turn the eyes and the head toward point of cutaneous stimulation
Corticospinal tracts send branches to ascending tracts and release neuromodulators such as endorphins
Corticospinal tracts send branches to descending tracts and release neuromodulators such as endorphins
Somatic sensory area 1 - Choose correct
Includes areas 3a, 3b, 1, and 2 in postcentral gyrus of the cortex
Topographic (somatotopic) projection = the feet - near the midline of the brain,
Topographic (somatotopic) projection = the feet - laterally, near the lateral fissure.
The cells of the S1 cortex are organized in columns specific to a particular modality.
The receptive fields of neurons contain only excitatory zones.
Somatic sensory area 1 (homunculus) - Choose correct
Regions needing low resolution are represented in the brain in fine detail
Regions of the body most richly supplied with sensory receptors have the largest number of neurons in the related areas of the neocortex.
High resolution is achieved by having many small receptive fields on the body surface
A larger representation in the cortex occurs when less neurons are dedicated to a region of the body.
Sensory area 1 - Modality of stimulus - Choose correct
Areas 3b, 1- respond to slowly adapting cutaneous receptors
Area 1- Deep skin receptors
Area 2 - deep skin receptors
Area 3a - muscle spindle, tendon and joint receptors
Somatic sensory area 1 (homunculus - S1) = destruction to S1 causes inability to ...
...to localize sensations discretely and judge pressure and weight
...to judge shapes and forms and to recognize the position of parts of the body.
...to judge taste and smell
...to judge texture of material and fine gradations in temperature
Somatic sensory area 2 - choose correct sentence
Impulses come from the ventral column system
Impulses come from the spinothalamic system and S1 area
Located in postcentral gyrus - posterior and inferior part (area 40 of the cerebral cortex).
Localization in this area is good.
Somatic association area - Choose wrong
Lesion to this area cause inability to recognize own body on same side as the lesion
Located behind the S1 area - areas 5 and 7
Lesion to this area cause inability to recognize own body opposite to the lesion
Lesion of this area lead to inability to recognize the complex forms (feeling for the shape of one's own body is lost).
Sensory are of the cerebral cortex - choose correct pairing
Visual cortex: occipital lobe
Olfactory cortex: superior surface of prefrontal lobe
Primary auditory cortex: inferior part of temporal lobe
Taste area: lower tip of postcentral gyrus
Division of neurons; choose what doesn't belong below.
Sensory neuron
Dorsal root ganglion
Efferent neuron
Interneurons of CNS - most reflexes go through these
Interneurons - characteristics; choose correct
Have both inhibitory and excitatory function
Slow neuron
Produce action potential
Hard neuron to excite
Salitatory conduction
Fast conduction (120m/s)
From one node of ranvier to another
Slow conduction (3m/s)
Unmyelinated conduction
Bell-Magendie Law; choose correct
In spinal cord conduction goes uni-aterally between anterior and porsterior root, in one direction only.
Anterior spinal nerve roots contain only motor fibers
Posterior spinal nerve roots contain only sensory fibers
In spinal cord conduction goes bi-laterally between anterior and porsterior root
Reflexes; choose wrong
Somatic motor reflex - goes to viscera
Somatic motor reflex - goes to muscle and skin
Autonomic motor reflex - goes to viscera
Autonomic motor reflex - goes to muscle and skin
Monosynaptic reflex (knee-jerk)- Choose correct
Large reflex arc
One synaps between sensory and motor neuron
Starts in Ia afferent fibers from muscle spindle
Complicated reflex
Duration of the knee jerk 19-24 ms.
Spinal regulation; choose correct
Each muscle spindle consists of 10 muscle fibers enclosed in a connective tissue capsule
Nuclear bag fibers - thicker, 2 per spindle
Nuclear chain fibers - thicker, 2 per spindle
Primary - annulospiral endings – rapidly conducting Ia (A-alpha) afferents
Secondary - annulospiral endings – rapidly conducting Ia (A-alpha) afferents
Static (tonic) response of the nuclear bag region (rapid discharge after fast stretch, less rapid during sustained stretch)
Dynamic (phasic) response of the nuclear chain region (discharge at an increased rate throughout the period when the muscle is stretched).
Intrafusal muscle fibers - have gamma-motor neurons (S, D)
Extrafusal muscle fibers - have alpha-motor neurons
Spinal regulation - muscle spindle; choose correct
Only the ends of the muscle spindle contract, due to lack of actin and myosin in the centre
The mid-portion of the muscle spindle can stretch
Gamma motor neurons contract extrafusal muscle fibers and plates, contracting outer part of muscle spindle
Ia fibers only gives nuclear chain fiber
Reflex patterns; choose correct
Dynamic response –increase spindle sensitivity to steady stretch
Gamma motoneurons cause contraction of spindle- stretch of nuclear bag portion – activation of Ia – reflex
Gamma discharge increases with alpha discharge
Static response - increase spindle sensitivity to rate of stretch
Gamma discharge with muscle stretch – increase of discharge in Ia
Dynamic response – decrease spindle sensitivity to rate of stretch
Control – descending tracts from CNS – postural control
Gamma discharge decreases with alpha discharge
Inverse stretch reflex; choose correct
Sensory innervation: Ib - EPSP on motor neurons via interneurons
Activation: passive stretch, active contraction of muscle
Receptors: in muscle spindle (nerve endings among fascicles of tendon)
Very high muscle tension produces – cessation of contraction (autogenic inhibition)
Regulate muscle force
Withdrawal reflex; choose correct
Receptor: in muscle
Stimuli - nociceptive, noxious, painful
Response - flexor muscle- contraction (limb is moved away from the range of the irritating stimulus), extensor – inhibition
Effectors - recruitment of motor units – after discharge
Center - inhibition of stimulus in spinal cord
Functions of spinal cord; choose correct
Regulation of the sensory function, contains motor centers and efferent pathways.
Regulation of the motor function, contains sensory centers and efferent pathways
Spinal modulation of impulses performed by sensory, motor, and interneurons in particular spinal segment
Spinal modulation of impulses performed by sensory, motor, and interneurons among various spinal segments
Function of spinal cord - spinal centers; choose correct
Grey matter – neural centers for somatic-motor & sensory, and autonomic-motor & sensory
White matter – neural centers for somatic-motor & sensory, and autonomic-motor & sensory
Grey matter – neural pathways afferent and efferent
White matter – neural pathways afferent and efferent
Which does not belong as a division of the functions of the spinal cord?
Convergence and divergence
After-effect
Contraction and relaxation
Summation and facilitation
Inhibition
Spinal cord; choose correct
alpha-motor neuron is a final common pathway, it connects impulses
Central inhibition - presynaptic is only EPSP
Central inhibition - Postsynaptic and autoinhibition are EPSP
Central inhibition - Autoinhibition is IPSP and mediated by renshaw cells
Inhibitory interneurons; choose correct
Inhibitory interneurons modulating alpha-motoneurons through (IPSP) renshaw cells
Inhibitory interneurons in stretch reflex.
Inhibitory interneurons in inverse-stretch reflex.
Inhibitory interneurons in withdrawal reflex.
Use glycine in its synapses
Afferent pathways to cerebral cortex - Spino reticular tract
Crosses midline and ascends to brain stem reticular formation
Projects bi-laterally through intralaminar nuclei of the thalamus to regions of the cerebral cortex
Plays major role in general alertness and arousal in response to tactile (painful) stimuli
Does not cross midline before ascending to brain stem reticular formation
Afferent pathways to cerebral cortex - spinotectal (spinomesencephalic) tract; choose wrong
Does not cross midline
Crosses midline
Projects to and synapses with anterior colliculi, play major role in orientating eyes and head towards visual stimuli
The tract send fibers to grey matter with axons to post. horn of the spinal cord, can suppress incoming pain signal
Spinal cord tests; choose correct
Turck exam - Examines withdrawal reflex in spinal frog
Brondgest - facilitation and inhibition of the reflex
Sechenov - Component of the reflex arc
Turck exam - Relation between strength of the stimulus and response
Neurological examinations; choose correct
Always consider left side symmetry
Consider central vs. peripheral deficits
Organize your thinking into seven categories
Organize your thinking into five categories