Mechanoreception Flashcards
What does peripheral receptor equal?
mechanoreceptor
In terms of mechanoreception what does adequate stimulus equate to?
Mechanical distortion
- pressure
- vibration
- tension
What is exteroception?
- Give information about things coming into contact with the body
What is proprioception?
- Proprio (latin - “about self”)
- awareness of position
What is touch?
The sensory experience when mechanoreceptors are excited - involves central nervous system
What are examples of oro-facial mechanoreceptors?
Mucosa (and skin)
- food texture etc
- important for mastication
Periodontal ligament
- forces on teeth
Muscles
- muscle spindles - muscle length
Joint receptors
- joint position and movement
What is the effect of stimulation of mechanoreceptors?
- sensation of touch
- reflexes e.g.
jaw muscle reflexes
salivary reflexes - chewing gum - Interact/modulate other sensory modalities:
- the effect of rubbing a painful area - gate control
What is the receptive field?
the area/space where a stimulus will affect the receptor
What does 2 point discrimination reflect?
- innervation density
- size of receptive field
describe PDL
important “sensory” organ
- exteroceptive role
and
- proprioceptive role
PDLM properties
- no branched axons between adjacent teeth PDLs - easy to localise
- Innervation density higher at apex
adequate stimulus: - tension in the PDL due to pressure applied to tooth
- tooth moves around a fulcrum
amount of PDLM activity depends on?
- direction of applied force
- magnitude of force
- adaptation properties
- threshold of the receptors
- position of receptors in PDL
Same receptor, why differences in properties?
- linked to position relative to fulcrum
- smaller stimulus nearer the fulcrum
describe sensory pathway
stage 1: mechanoreception
- transduction of stimulus
- propagation along primary afferent nerve
stage 2: processing at first synapse
- trigeminal nucleus
stage 3: processing in thalamus
stage 4: conscious perception
- somatosensory cortex
describe trigeminal pathways
Primary afferent cell bodies:
- V ganglion
- mesencephalic nucleus (PDL)
Synapse:
- mainly in main sensory nucleus
- project to spinal V nuclei as well
Project to: sensory cortex via thalamus