Term
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Definition
Ventral rami C1-C5 Skin and muscles of the neck and shoulder Contains the phrenic nerve |
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Definition
Ventral rami C4-T1 Skin and muscles of the upper limb Contains axillary, musculocutaneous, radial, median, ulnar nerves |
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Definition
T1-T12 No plexuses Ventral rami form intercostal nerves - supply the muscles of intercostal spaces and skin and muscles of the anterior/lateral trunk |
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Definition
Ventral rami L1-L4 Skin and muscles of the lower abdominopelvic region and anterior thigh Contains genitofemoral, femoral, and obturator nerves |
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Definition
Ventral rami L4-S4 Skin and muscles of the buttock, posterior thigh, leg and foot Contains the sciatic and pudendal nerves |
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Term
Dorsal rami of spinal nerves |
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Definition
Smaller than ventral Serve the skin and muscles of the posterior body trunk at their approximate emergence level |
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Definition
Formed from ventral rami of all regions except thoracic nerves Serve the motor and sensory needs of the muscles and skin of the limbs Ventral rami fibers unite, then diverge to form peripheral nerves |
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Definition
C3, C4, C5 Peripheral nerve of the cervical plexus Motor to the diaphragm |
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Term
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Definition
Peripheral nerve of the brachial plexus Deltoid and teres minor muscles |
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Definition
Peripheral nerve of the brachial plexus Biceps brachii and brachialis muscles |
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Definition
Peripheral nerve of the brachial plexus Triceps brachii and brachioradialis muscles Skin of the posterolateral upper limb |
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Definition
Peripheral nerve of the brachial plexus Forearm flexor muscle group Skin of the lateral 2/3 of the hand |
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Definition
Peripheral nerve of the brachial plexus Flexor carpi ulnaris Skin of the medial 1/3 of hand |
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Definition
Peripheral nerve of the lumbar plexus Skin of external genitalia |
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Term
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Definition
Peripheral nerve of the lumbar plexus Quadriceps and sartorius muscles Skin of anterior and medial thigh |
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Definition
Peripheral nerve of the lumbar plexus Medial thigh muscles such as gracilis Skin of medial thigh for hip and knee joints |
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Definition
Peripheral nerve of the sacral plexus Largest nerve of the body Composed of the common fibular and tibial nerves |
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Definition
Peripheral nerve of the sacral plexus Tibialis anterior and short head of biceps femoris muscles Skin of anterior leg and dorsum of foot |
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Term
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Definition
Peripheral nerve of the sacral plexus Hamstrings, gastrocnemius and soleus muscles Skin of posterior leg and sole of foot |
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Definition
Peripheral nerve of the sacral plexus Skin and muscles of the perineum |
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Term
The Autonomic Nervous System |
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Definition
The subdivision of the PNS that regulates body activities that are generally not under conscious control Involuntary |
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Term
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Definition
Division of the ANS Also called craniosacral Preganglionic neurons located in brainstem (cranial nerves III, VII, IX, X) and sacral region (S2-S4) of the spinal cord Synapse with the ganglionic neuron in a terminal ganglion (within the walls of the organ) |
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Term
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Definition
Parasympathetic Preganglionic axons in the sacral region that travel to the pelvic cavity and synapse with the ganglionic neurons in the organs served |
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Term
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Definition
Division of the ANS Also called thoracolumbar Preganglionic neurons are in the lateral horns of the gray matter of the thoracic spinal cord (T1-L2) Sympathetic chain ganglia |
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Term
Sympathetic chain ganglia |
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Definition
2 trunks alongside the vertebral column Axons may synapse at the same level with a neuron traveling to an effector, or synapse at a higher or lower level, or synapse in a distant collateral ganglion anterior to the vertebral column |
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Term
Splanchnic nerves (thoracic, abdominopelvic) |
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Definition
Sympathetic Axon from sympathetic chain ganglia, passes through the ganglion without synapsing and joins the splanchnic nerves, travel to the viscera to synapse with a collateral ganglion |
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Term
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Definition
31 pairs All mixed nerves Most exit via intervertebral foramina, except C1 Divide into dorsal and ventral rami 8 cervical, 12 thoracic, 5 lumbar, 5 sacral, 1 coccygeal |
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Term
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Definition
1. receptor 2. sensory neuron 3. integration center of CNS (spinal cord usually) 4. motor neuron 5. effector |
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Term
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Definition
Reflexes that involve stimulation of skeletal muscles by the somatic division of the nervous system
Spinal reflexes and cranial nerve reflexes |
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Term
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Definition
Mediated through the autonomic nervous system without conscious awareness Pupillary reflexes, ciliospinal reflex, salivary reflex |
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Term
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Definition
Require only spinal cord activity Fast reflexes Stretch reflexes, crossed-extensor reflex, superficial cord reflex |
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Term
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Definition
Mediated by cranial nerves Corneal reflex, gag reflex |
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Term
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Definition
Important in maintaining posture, balance, and locomotion Initiated by tapping a tendon, which stretches the muscle the tendon is attached to, stimulating muscle spindles and causing reflex contraction of the stretched muscle -Reciprocal inhibition of antagonist muscles Patellar and Achilles reflexes |
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Term
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Definition
Somatic, spinal, stretch Reflex hammer used Response: leg swings forward as quadriceps muscle contracts FEMORAL NERVE |
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Term
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Definition
Somatic, spinal, stretch Reflex hammer used Response: contraction of gastrocnemius and soleus (plantar flexion) SCIATIC NERVE |
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Term
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Definition
Somatic, spinal, stretch Flexor, withdrawal reflex followed by extension of the opposite limb Pin, sharp pen or pencil used Response: withdraws hand, flexion of the elbow - other forearm extends MUSCULOCUTANEOUS AND RADIAL NERVES |
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Term
Superficial cord reflexes |
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Definition
Result from pain and temperature changes
Initiated by stimulation of receptors in the skin and mucosae
Depend both on functional upper-motor pathways and on the cord-level reflex arc
Plantar reflex |
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Term
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Definition
Somatic, superficial cord Reflex hammer used Response: Downward flexion and adduction of the toes TIBIAL AND COMMON PERONEAL NERVES |
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Term
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Definition
Somatic, cranial Wisp of cotton used Response: subject blinks TRIGEMINAL NERVE (V) |
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Definition
Somatic, cranial Tongue depressor used Response: pharyngeal muscles contract and subject gags GLOSSOPHARYNGEAL (IX) AND VAGUS (X) NERVES |
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Term
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Definition
Autonomic Light shined into left eye Response: left pupil contracts OPTIC (II) NERVE (afferent), OCULOMOTOR (III) NERVE (efferent) Ipsilateral response |
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Term
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Definition
Autonomic Light shined into left eye Response: right pupil also contracts OPTIC (II) NERVE (afferent), OCULOMOTOR (III) NERVE (efferent) Contralateral response |
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Term
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Definition
Autonomic Stroke hairs on back of neck and left side Response: left pupillary dilation SYMPATHETIC RESPONSE |
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Definition
Autonomic Activation of salivary glands with exposure to lemon juice Response: increased production of saliva PARASYMPATHETIC STIMULATION |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
Reflexes resulting from practice or repetition Involve a far larger number of neural pathways and many types of higher intellectual activities Longer response time |
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Term
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Definition
Receptors react to touch, pressure, pain, heat, cold, stretch, vibration, and changes in position Located throughout the body |
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Term
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Definition
Sight, hearing, equilibrium, smell, and taste Receptors are large, complex sense organs or small, localized groups of receptors |
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Term
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Definition
React to stimuli in the external environment Typically found close to the body surface Include simple cutaneous receptors in the skin and the highly specialized receptor structures of the special senses |
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Term
Interoceptors (visceroceptors) |
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Definition
Respond to stimuli arising within the body Include stretch receptors, chemoreceptors |
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Term
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Definition
Respond to internal stimuli but are restricted to skeletal muscles, tendons, joints, ligaments, and connective tissue coverings Provide info on the position and degree of stretch of those structures |
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Term
General sensory receptors |
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Definition
Cutaneous receptors and proprioceptors |
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Term
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Definition
Also called tactile corpuscles Respond to light touch Located in the dermal papillae of hairless skin |
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Term
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Definition
Also called lamellated corpuscles Lie deepest in the dermis Respond to deep pressure at its first application, and monitor high-frequency vibrations |
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Term
Two point discrimination test |
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Definition
Tested for the density of the touch receptors in different areas of the body Areas that have the greatest density of tactile receptors have a heightened ability to "feel" - areas of fine motor control The smallest distance at which two points of contact can be felt |
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Term
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Definition
The ability to determine which portion of the skin has been touched |
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Term
Adaptation of sensory receptors |
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Definition
Adaptation - when a stimulus is applied for a prolonged period, the rate of receptor discharge slows and conscious awareness of the stimulus declines or is lost until change occurs Tested for with coins, seeing how long it took before subject could no longer feel the coin on skin |
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Term
Adaptation of temperature receptors |
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Definition
Tested for with hot and cold water baths, after a minute to adapt to the hot and cold both hands were placed in room temperature Negative afterimages |
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Term
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Definition
The sensations that the subject experiences when the adaptation is removed and sensation is normalized Ex hot water/cold water --> room temperature |
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Term
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Definition
A sensory experience in which pain is perceived as arising in one area of the body when in fact another remote area is receiving the painful stimulus |
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Term
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Definition
The process by which the brain refers sensations to their usual point of stimulation |
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Term
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Definition
Moves eye laterally VI (ABDUCENS) |
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Term
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Definition
Medial movement III (OCULOMOTOR) |
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Term
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Definition
Elevates eye and turns it medially III (OCULOMOTOR) |
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Term
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Definition
Depresses eye and turns it medially III (OCULOMOTOR) |
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Term
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Definition
Depresses eye and turns it laterally IV (TROCHLEAR) |
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Term
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Definition
Elevates eye and turns it laterally III (OCULOMOTOR) |
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Term
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Definition
X and dot When the dot focuses on the blind spot, which lacks photoreceptors, it will disappear |
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Term
Near point of accommodation |
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Definition
Tests the elasticity of the lens Hold a straight pin at arm's length, slowly move it toward that eye until it becomes distorted |
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Term
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Definition
Snellen eye chart at 20 feet 20/20 vision, etc |
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Term
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Definition
Tested with wheel chart Irregularities in the curvatures of the lens and/or the cornea lead to a blurred vision problem |
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Term
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Definition
Tested for with Ishihara's color plates Deficiencies in the cones or color photoreceptor cells |
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Term
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Definition
Two-eyed Both eyes see with slightly different views There is two-eyed vision in the overlap area Test for binocular vision with pencils - closing each eye in turn and noticing displacement |
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Term
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Definition
Instrument used to examine the eyeball interior to determine visually the condition of the retina, optic disc, and internal blood vessels |
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Term
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Definition
The normal eye Able to accommodate properly |
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Term
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Definition
Individuals in whom the image normally focuses in front of the retina Near-sightedness: they can see close objects without difficulty, but distant objects are blurred or indistinct Correction requires a concave lens |
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Term
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Definition
Individuals in which the image focuses behind the retina Farsightedness No problem with distant vision but do have trouble seeing close up Need convex lenses |
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Term
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Definition
Decreasing elasticity of the lens, resulting in difficulty in focusing for near vision "Old vision" |
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Term
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Definition
The ability of the eye to focus differentially for objects of near vision |
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