Physio-Neural Circuits and Reflexes (Brownell) Flashcards
What factors control nerve membrane potential?
-Voltage inside relative to the outside.
-Equilibrium potential:
• ECa = 120 mV
• ENa = 60 mV
• ECl = -65 mV
• EK = -80 mV
-The amplitude and duration of fluctuation depends on what types of ion channels (g’X’) are opened (or closed), the duration of opening/closing and the driving force (Vm-Ex) for each permeant ion.
-Equilibrium potentials for the 4 main permeant ions are virtually constant and set up by active pumps for Na+, K+, Cl- and Ca++ in/out of cells
-Opening/closing of membrane ion channels (“conductances”) for these ions cause changes in membrane potential (voltage inside relative to outside)
What are the 3 main classes of channel conductances?
- Voltage-activated ion channels (=>action potentials)
- Ligand gated or metabotropic (g-protein coupled) channels (=>synaptic transmitters)
- Sensory transducer channels
What is responsible for an Action Potential?
Voltage-gated Na+ channels and delayed K+ channels.
Where are motor neurons found?
The ventral horn of the spinal cord gray matter
What does and alpha motor neuron excite? How many muscle fibers does 1 alpha MN innervate? How many neural plates are on each muscle fiber?
- Skeletal muscle
- 5-2000
- just 1
How do alpha motor neurons and skeletal muscle fibers develop?
TOGETHER!
The neurons make connections super early, before the muscles are even really muscle fibers (just simple myotubes at that time).
What is a motor unit?
one alpha motor neuron and all the muscle fibers it innervates.
What do the medial neurons in the spinal cord correlate with?
Proximal muscles (lateral=distal muscles)
What do extrafusal muscle fibers do? What are they innervated by?
Force contraction.
Alpha Motor Neurons.
What are intrafusal muscles fibers part of? What are they innervated by? What reaction do they cause?
Part of the muscle spindle.
Innervated by Gamma motor neurons.
Cause spindles to contract.
What do Muscle receptor organ (MRO) (Ia) and Golgi tendon organ (GTO) (Ib) afferents sense?
muscle length and tension
What are the two types of intrafusal muscle fibers?
Dynamic and static ‘nuclear bag fibers’
What are the 2 types of sensory afferents? What do they do?
- Type Ia: responds dynamically (most sensitive to changes in muscle length).
- Type II: tonic responses that support sustained output.
What are the 2 types of gamma motor neurons?
dynamic and static
What is the myotatic reflex (I)? What are the 5 steps?
MRO feedback acts to automatically maintain constant muscle length.
Steps:
1. Load stretches muscle.
2. MRO (spindle) stretches which excites Ia.
3. Ia conducts impulse directly to homonymous alpha motor neuron.
4. Alpha motor neuron fires which causes contraction of extrafusal muscle fibers.
5. Increased muscle tension compensates load, and restores desired muscle length.