Ascending Spinal Pathways Flashcards
What are some of the general senses?
- nociceptors (pain)
- thermoreceptors (temp, change in temp)
- mechanoreceptors (tactile and proprioception)
Where are the sensor receptors for the general senses found?
- throughout the body, mainly in the skin
What are the special senses?
- olfaction (smell: chemoreceptors)
- gustation (taste: chemoreceptors)
- vision (sight: photoreceptors)
- hearing and equilibrium (balance: mechanoreceptors)
Where are the sensory receptors for the special senses found?
- in the head
What are the function of the special senses, and via what nervous system does there information transmit?
- they are specialised to respond to one kind of stimulus: act as interface between environment and body/brain
- information only transmitted via CNS
What is the process involved in perceiving stimuli (from PNS to CNS)?
- PNS receives sensations from external world and internal environment that have been detected by sensory receptors
- PNS conducts the information to CNS as an AP for awareness
Define crude touch (pain, temp and itch) and discuss its purpose + features of its perception.
- the ‘protective senses
- ‘older system’
- slow system - conveyed by small and less/un-myelinated axons
- conveyed to brain via anterolateral (spinothalamic) pathways
Define fine touch and proprioception, and discuss features of their perception.
- ‘explorative’ senses
- ‘new system’
- fast system (conveyed by large and highly myelinated axons)
- conveyed to brain via dorsal-column (medial-lemniscus) pathway
How do spinal nerves receive sensory input?
- outside the cell, via dorsal root ganglion (where the cell body is contained within the (pseudo) unipolar neuron
- then through the dorsal root and dorsal rootlets, into dorsal horn where it there travels to the ventral motor horn
How do spinal nerves output motor information?
- the cell body is contained in the motor neuron (inside grey matter of cell), information then travels through the ventral rootlets, roots and then back into the spinal nerve
How does the difference in diameter of an axon correlate to the speed of reaction?
- thin = slow (protective receptors)
- thick = fast (mechanoreceptors)
What are the functions of the enlargements on the spinal cord (cervical and lumbar), and what is a distinguishing difference between them?
- cervical - control + supply of upper limb and shoulder
- lumbar - control + supply of lower limb and pelvis (much more grey matter because of number of neurons required to innervate the number of muscles in the legs)
Where do dorsal rootlets enter the spinal cord, and where do ventral rootlets exit the spinal cord?
Dorsal rootlets enter at the dorsolateral sulcus
Ventral rootlets exit at the ventrolateral sulcus
What is the cauda equina?
- the bundle of spinal nerve roots below the conus medullaris
What pathway is responsible for receiving proprioception and fine touch information?
- the dorsal column-medial Lemniscus