Term
encapuslated receptors located at musculotendinous junctions in seriese with extrafusal fibers |
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Definition
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Term
intertwined among these tendon fascicles are fine ________ terminal endings of large primary afferent fibers |
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Definition
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Term
intertwined among these tendon fascicles are fine unmyelinated terminal endings of ______ ______ afferent fibers |
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Definition
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Term
intertwined among these tendon fascicles are fine unmyelinated terminal endings of large primary _________ fibers |
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Definition
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Term
in relaxed muscle, these nerve terminals within the tendon organs are not _________ or _______ |
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Definition
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Term
What must occur for these specialized tendon fascicles to become taut |
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Definition
muscle contracts and develops tension |
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Term
What happens as a result of these specialized tendon fascicles becoming taut, |
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Definition
they compress afferent nerve endings causing them to discharge |
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Term
golgi tendon organs have _____ firing thresholds to tension caused by muscle shortenting |
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Definition
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Term
golgi tendon organs have _____ firing thresholds to tension caused by muscle lengthening |
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Definition
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Term
golgi tendon organs will always fiber in response to what type of motion |
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Definition
muscle shortening, contraction |
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Term
golgi tendon organs will not always fire to this type of action |
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Definition
muscle lengthening/stretch |
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Term
The adequate stimulus for tendon organ firing is development of tension by what type of muscles |
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Definition
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Term
GTO's discharge frequencies are ______ to the active tension developed |
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Definition
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Term
GTO's are referred to as ______ receptors |
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Definition
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Term
Upon entering the spinal cord, central terminations divide into many terminal branches and synapse on small _______ and _______ interneurons in the spinal gray matter |
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Definition
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Term
The GTO synapses onto the interneuron, which in turn synapse upon what |
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Definition
motor neurons that innervate the same (homonymous) muscle |
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Term
any increase in active muscle tension excites tendon organs whose signal, in turn, inhibits homonymous motoneurons whose activity caused the tension |
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Definition
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Term
incoming signals that are inhibitory to motoneurons of one group of muscles, are at the same time excitatory to those of antagonists |
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Definition
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Term
all skeletal muscle contains several.... |
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Definition
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Term
muscle spindle neural input does not reach what |
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Definition
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Term
one of the most complex receptors in the body |
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Definition
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Term
Muscle spindles provide sensory feedback to the CNS about what depending on limb position |
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Definition
absolute lengths of muscles |
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Term
Muscle spindles provide sensory feedback to the CNS about what in regards to movement |
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Definition
changes in muscle lengths |
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Term
Muscle spindles provide sensory feedback to the CNS about what in regards to velocity of movement |
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Definition
rates of change in muscle length |
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Term
neural feedback from muscle spindles comprises a major component of the sensory input responsible for (4) |
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Definition
motor control, motor coordination, kinesthetic sensation, proprioceptive sensation |
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Term
how long are muscle spindles approximately |
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Definition
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Term
each end of a muscle spindle attaches to what |
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Definition
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Term
muscle spindle end attach to extrafusal muscle fibers with which they lie in _______ |
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Definition
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Term
muscle spindles attach to extrafusal muscle fibers which means what in terms of length |
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Definition
when one changes length, so will the other |
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Term
with passive increases in muscle length, what happens to spindle firing? |
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Definition
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Term
when muscle length decreases, what happens to spindle firing |
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Definition
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Term
which muscles tend to be more involved in precise, skilled movements |
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Definition
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Term
which muscles tend to be richer in spindles |
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Definition
muscles involved in a precise skilled movements |
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Term
which muscles tend to be less rich in spindles |
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Definition
large proximal and trunk muscles |
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Term
Muscles of which groups contain the highest number of spindles? (3) |
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Definition
deep neck muscles, hands, feet |
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Term
unlike most other receptors, muscle spindle sensitivity can be _______ |
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Definition
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Term
how are adjustments made to muscle spindle sensitivity? |
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Definition
motor system that functions in parallel |
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Term
what is important to note about the motor system that controls muscle spindle sensitivity? |
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Definition
independent from the motor system that controls extrafusal muscle fibers |
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Term
muscle spindle sensitivity is controlled by what motor neurons |
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Definition
gamme motoneurons/fusimotoneurons |
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Term
what do gamma motorneurons innervate |
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Definition
small muscle fibers called intrafusal muscle fibers |
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Term
gamma motorneurons innervate intrafusal fibers that are found at _______ ends |
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Definition
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Term
what are the 2 types of intrafusal fibers? |
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Definition
nuclear bag, nuclear chain intrafusal fibers |
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Term
how do nuclear bag and nuclear chain intrafusal fibers differ (3) |
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Definition
morphologically, biochemically, functionally |
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Term
muscle spindles have primary and secondary ________ endings |
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Definition
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Term
muscle spindles contain two types of sensory-end organs _______ and _______ afferent endings |
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Definition
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Term
which endings make firm and intimate contact with every intrafusal fiber within the spindle? |
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Definition
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Term
which afferent endings make intimate contact around nuclear chain fibers but little/no contact on nuclear bag fibers |
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Definition
secondary afferent endings |
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Term
which afferent endings provide the CNS with information about velocity of movements? |
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Definition
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Term
which fibers are implicated in velocity sensitivity of the muscle spindle |
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Definition
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Term
why are nuclear bags implicated in the velocity sensitivity of the muscle spindle |
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Definition
primary endings interact with nuclear bags, secondary do not. primary endings provide the CNS with information about velocity of movements |
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Term
during passive stretch, what happens to muscle spindle discharge frequency? |
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Definition
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Term
during active shortening, what happens to muscle spindle discharge frequency |
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Definition
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Term
even if the muscle is relaxed at resting length, which endings are continuously discharging |
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Definition
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Term
primary endings are ________ discharging even if the muscle is relaxed at resting length |
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Definition
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Term
primary endings are continuously discharging even if the muscle is.... |
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Definition
relaxed at resting length |
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Term
which ending does not show spontaneous activity? |
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Definition
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Term
which endings decrease their discharge and show a short pause in their firing during an evoked isometric muscle twitch |
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Definition
both primary and secondary endings |
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Term
primary and secondary endings decrease their discharge and show a short pause in their firing during what |
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Definition
evoked isometric muscle contraction |
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Term
the pause that occurs during an evoked isometric muscle contraction occurs at the time that what occurs |
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Definition
tendon organ has reached its peak firing rate |
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Term
what is the adequate stimulus for primary and secondary endings? |
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Definition
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Term
at resting lengths, what endings fire? |
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Definition
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Term
the response of the primary ending to passive stretch has what two component |
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Definition
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Term
how does the firing rate of the primary ending compare during the dynamic/phase component than during the static phase when the muscle is being held at new length |
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Definition
firing rate of the primary ending is higher during the dynamic/phasic component |
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Term
frequency of firing during the dynamic phase of the stretch is proportional to what |
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Definition
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Term
the phasic component of the response codes what information |
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Definition
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Term
the static component codes information about what |
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Definition
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Term
which endings are slowly adapting receptors |
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Definition
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Term
which endings provide the CNS with a continual input about muscle length |
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Definition
the persistently active primary endings |
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Term
primary spindle endings make what type of connection centrally? motor or afferent? |
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Definition
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Term
central afferent connections from primary spindle endings make ________ synapses directly upon motorneurons innervating homonymous muscles in which the spindle lies? |
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Definition
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Term
central afferent connections from primary spindle endings make excitatory synapses directly upon motoneurons innervating the same muscles in which the spindle lies. What is the type of circuit called? |
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Definition
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Term
The reflex circuit serves what |
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Definition
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Term
central connections from primary endings: afferents also diver to influence the _______ of other neurons at the same and distal spinal segments |
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Definition
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Term
central connections from primary endings: afferents also diverge to influence the excitability of other neurons, such as afferents making excitatory connections with motoneurons innervating synergistic muscles and inhibtory connections with motoneurons of the antagonistic muscles through inhibitory interneurons. This is an example of what? |
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Definition
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Term
In any stretch reflex, homonymous and synergistic muscles will function together unoppose because of what |
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Definition
reciprocal inhibition of the antagonistic muscles |
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Term
in addition to their spinal connections, muscle spindles project information to what else |
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Definition
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Term
muscle spindles project information to the brain where it is integrated with information from other regions of the body to permit what |
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Definition
purposeful and coordinated movements |
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Term
spindles have cortical representation, information from them appears to have no access to consciousness. T/F |
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Definition
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Term
spindle input is thought to contribute to what sense |
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Definition
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Term
spindle input is thought to contribute to position sense because joint position can be sense after what happens to cutaneous and joint receptors |
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Definition
after they are anesthestized |
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Term
spindle information projects to what part of the diencephalon and its neighbor? |
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Definition
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Term
why is spindle information projection to the cerebellum considered especially importnat? |
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Definition
for the regulation of direction, extent, speed of movements |
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Term
small motor axons that terminate within the spindle capsule on the polar regions of the intrafusal muscle fibers |
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Definition
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Term
action potentials in gamma axons cause what |
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Definition
intrafusal muscle fibers to contract |
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Term
what may innervate intrafusal fibers of more than one spindle |
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Definition
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Term
with any on spindle a gamma axon will terminate on what |
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Definition
several intrafusal fibers |
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Term
the brain receives information from the muscle spindle but it projects information back to the spindles via what |
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Definition
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Term
if afferent input from muscle and joint receptors is distorted or abolished through injury or disease what happens |
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Definition
motor abnormalities result |
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Term
What is the machinery that allows the nervous system to independently adjust the length sensitivity and the velocity of the muscle spindle? |
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Definition
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