Term
The somatosensory component of the nervous system provides awareness of body sensations like. . . |
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Definition
touch, temperature, body position and pain--
(the four major modalities) |
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Term
Three types of sensory neurons include. . . |
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Definition
General somatic
Special somatic
General visceral |
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Term
General somatic afferent neurons. . . |
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Definition
have branches with distinct type of receptors
that result in sensations
such as touch, temperature and pain |
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Term
Special somatic afferen neurons have. . . |
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Definition
receptors located primarily
in the muscles, tendons and joints
that sense position and movement |
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Term
General visceral afferent neurons. . . |
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Definition
have receptors on various visceral structures
that sense fullness and discomfort |
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Term
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Definition
• transmit sensory info from the periphery to the CNS
or
• from the sensory receptors to the dorsal horn neurons
in the spinal cord |
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Term
Second-order neurons. . . |
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Definition
communicate with various
reflex networks and sensory pathways in the spinal cord
and travel directly to the thalamus
or
communicate with various reflex circuits and transmit information to the thalamus |
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Term
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Definition
relay information from the
thalamus to the cerebral cortex |
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Term
Organizational framework for the
Somatosensory System. . . |
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Definition
- Central processing centers in the thalmus and cerbral cortex
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Term
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Definition
process and modify the sensory information
at the level of the second- and third-order neurons |
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Term
The somatosensory experience arises from info provided by a variety of receptors distributed thorughout the body.
These receptors montior four types or modalities of sensation which are. . . |
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Definition
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Term
All somatosensory info from the
limbs to the trunk
share a common clase of sensory neurons called. . . |
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Definition
dorsal root ganglion neurons |
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Term
Somatosensory information from the face and carinial structures is transmitted by. . . |
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Definition
the trigeminal sensory neurons |
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Term
A sensory unit is comprised of. . . |
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Definition
- the cell body of the dorsal root ganglion
- its peripheral branch (which innervates a small area of the periphery)
- its cental axon (which projects to the CNS)
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Term
Three types of nerve fibers. . . |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
- convey cutaneous pressure and touch sensation, cold sensation, mechanical pain and heat pain
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Term
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Definition
- transmit info from cutaneious and subcutaneous mechanoreceptors
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Term
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Definition
- convey cutaneous pressure and touch sensation, cold sensation, mechanical pain and heat pain
- NOTE: The lower urinary tract has both Aδ and C fibers
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Term
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Definition
- The region of the body wall that is supplied by a single pair of dorsal root ganglion
- 33 paired spinal nerves provide sensory and motor innervation of the body wall, the limbs, and the viscera.
- Neighboring dermatomes overlap one another suffciently so that a loss of one dorsal root or too ganglion results in reduced but not total loss of sensory innervation of a dermatome
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Term
On entry into the spinal cord, the central axons fo the somatosensory neuron branch extensively and project to neruons in the sponal cord gray matter.
Some cental axon branches become involved
in local spinal cord reflexes and directly initiate motor reflexes such as. . . |
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Definition
the flexor-withdrawal reflex |
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Term
The two parallel pathways that carry info from the
spinal cord to the thalamic level of sensation,
(each taking a different route through the CNS)
are. . . |
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Definition
These pathways relay information to the brain for three purposes:
- perception
- arousal
- motor control
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Term
The descriminative pathway crosses at the. . . |
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Definition
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Term
The anterolateral pathway crosses. . . |
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Definition
within the first few segments
of entering the spinal cord |
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Term
Advantages of having two pathways,
descriminative and anterolateral,
include. . . |
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Definition
- Sensory information can be handled in two different ways
- If on pathway is damages, the other still can provide input.
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Term
The descriminative pathway,
AKA The dorsal column-medial leminiscal pathway. . . |
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Definition
- is used for the rapid transmission of sensory info such as discriminative touch
- contains branches of primary afferent axons that travel up the ipsilateral (i.e. same side) dorsal comumns of the spinal cord white matter and synapse with highly evolved somatosensory input assoication neuorns in the medulla
- See figure 18.4 (A), p. 426
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Term
Distinct features of the discriminative pathway. . . |
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Definition
1. It relays precise info regarding spatial orientation
2. The only pathway taken by the sensations of muscle and joinn movement, virbration and delicate discrimiative touch, e.g. "two-point descrimination"
3. Integrates input from multiple receptors (stereognosis) |
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Term
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Definition
- The sense of shape and size of an object in absense of visualization (screwdriver vs. knife)
- This complex interpretive perception implies that both the discriminative and higher-order parietal association cortex are funtioning properly.
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Term
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Definition
If the discriminative somatosensory pathway is functional
but the parietal association cortex has become discretely
damaged, the person can correctly describe the object but
does not recognize that it is a screwdriver |
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Term
The anterolateral pathway
(anterior and lateral spinothalamic pathways)
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Definition
- consist of bilateral, multisynaptic, slow-conducting tracts
- transmit sensory info such as pain, thermal sensations, crude touch and pressure that does not require discrete localization
- See figure 18.4 (B), p. 426
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Term
Anatomy of the anterolateral pathway. . .
- Fibers of the anterolateral pathway originate the dorsal horn, cross at the anterior commisure to the opposit anterolateral pathway where they ascend upward toward the brain
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Definition
- The spinothalamic tract fibers. . .
- synapse with several nuclei in the thalamus, but en route they give off numerous branches that travel to the reticular activating system of the brain stem
- These projections provide wakefullness or awareness after strong somatosensory stimulation like a startle
- Are responsible for autonomic nervous system responses like ↑ HR and BP, pupil dialation, etc.
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