Physiology of smell (pie) Flashcards
What is the primary location for sensing smell ?
Olfactory mucosa – patch of mucosa in the ceiling (dorsal roof) of the nasal cavity
What are olfactory receptors and there function/location ?
- Specialised endings of renewable afferent neurons
- Found in the olfactory mucosa of olfactory mucosa, function is to sense smell
Describe the structure of the olfactory receptors
- Each neuron has a thick short dendrite and an expanded end called an olfactory rod
- From the olfactory rods, cilia project to the surface of the olfactory mucosa (about 10-12 cilia per olfactory receptor neuron)
- Odorants (molecules that can be smelled) bind to the cilia
What do the axons of the olfactory cells collectively form ?
Form afferent fibres (going away back to the brain) of olfactory nerve
Describe the route of how impulses from olfactory receptors reach the brain
- Afferent nerve fibres of the olfactory nerve pierce the cribriform plate
- Enter the olfactory bulb
- Olfactory bulb neurons passes along the olfactory tract to reach temporal lobe and olfactory areas
By what mode of movement do odorants usually reach the olfactory cells (think about how things move across a plasma membrane)
By diffusion
Define what asomnia is and give some examples
Inability to smell - e.g. viral infections; allergy, nasal polyps, head injury etc
Define what hyposmia is and give some examples
Reduced ability to smell - e.g. viral infections; allergy, nasal polyps, head injury etc
Define what dysosmia is and give some examples
Altered sense of smell - e.g. differently interpreting some odours; and hallucinations of smell