Reflexes Flashcards
What is a reflex?
A specific, involuntary, unpremeditated, ‘built-in’ response to a particular stimulus.
What is a learned (acquired) reflex?
Many operations (including during driving a car).
Describe the concept of homeostasis with respect to reflexes.
- A stimulus-response sequence
ie
- A reflex
- Sometimes aware of stimulus and / or response.
- For many reflexes, no conscious awareness.
What is a reflex arc?
Describe it.
- A reflex arc is a pathway mediating a reflex.
- Stimulus - A detectable change in internal / external environment.
- Receptor - Detects the change.
- Integrating centre - Signal received (along with those from other stimulus / receptor interactions).
- Effector response - Sometimes response gives negative feedback.
Describe the spinal or motor reflex.
- Sensory component and effector component.
- Does not involve conscious thought.
- Sensory receptor
- Sensory nerve fibre
- Motorneurone from spinal cord to the muscle
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Alpha motor neurons
- have axons with a very large diameter.
- transmit impulses with a conduction velocity of between 70-120m/s (268mph).
- They are classed as being of the Aα type.
- These motor neurons innervate skeletal muscle (outside the CNS).
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Alpha motor neurons
Describe the organisation of the spinal cord for motor functions.
- Grey cord matter.
- Integrative area for cord reflexes.
- 1 = entry point for almost all sensory signals.
Then branches in 2:- One terminates immediately in grey matter.
- One signals to higher level NS.
- Each spinal cord segment has several million neurons.
What are the spinal cord segment types (in addition to sensory neurons)?
- Anterior motor neurons
- Several thousand neurons, 50-100% larger than most others, located in each segment of the anterior horns of the cord grey matter.
- Give rise to nerve fibres that leave the cord via anterior roots and directly innervate skeletal muscle fibres.
- These neurons are:
- Alpha motor neurons
- Gamma motor neurons
- These neurons are:
Describe alpha motor neurons (anterior motor neurons).
- Give rise to large type A alpha motor nerve fibres, averaging 14µm diameter;
- these fibres branch many times after entering the muscle and innervate the large skeletal muscle fibres.
- Stimulation of a single alpha nerve fibres excites 3-several hundred skeletal muscle fibres, ie in the motor unit.
Describe gamma motor neurons (anterior motor neurons).
- Much smaller than alpha motor neurons.
- Gamma motor neurons are located in the spinal cord anterior horns.
- Approximately 1/2 as many as alpha motor neurons.
- Transmit impulses through much smaller type A gamma motor nerve fibres, averaging 5µm in diameter.
- Go to small, special skeletal muscle fibres called intrafusal fibres.
- These constitute the middle of the muscle spindle, which helps conrol basic muscle ‘tone’.
Describe interneurons?
- About 30x as numerous as anterior mns.
- Are small and highly excitable.
- Often show spontaneous activity, capable of firing 1500 times per second.
- Have many interconnections with each other.
- Many also synapse directly with anterior mns.
Describe the role of muscle spindles and golgi tendon organs in muscle control.
- Muscle function control needs excitation of the muscle by spinal cord anterior motor neurons.
- Feedback of sensory information from each muscle to spinal cord, indicating functional status of each muscle at each instant.
- Ie, what is the muscle length, what is its instantaneous tension, how rapidly is its length or tension changing?
- Information is provided by:
- Muscle spindles throughout belly of muscle
- Send information to NS about muscle length or rate of change of length.
- Golgi tendon organs located in the muscle tendons and transmit information about tendon tension or rate of change of tension.
- Muscle spindles throughout belly of muscle
Describe the sensory innervation of muscle spindles.
- Sensory fibres originate in the central portion.
- Are stimulated by stretching of midportion of the spindle.
- Receptor excitation can be via:
- Lengthening whole muscle, stretching mid-portion of spindle.
- Contraction of end portions of the spindle’s intrafusal fibres, stretching midportion of the spindle.
- There are 2 types of sensory endings in central receptor area:
- Primary afferent: type 1a (~17µm diameter, ~70-120m/s).
- Secondary afferent: type 1 (~8µm diameter, ~15-30m/s).
Describe nuclear bag fibres.
- A type of muscle spindle intrafusal fibres.
- 1-3 in each spindle.
- Several muscle fibre nuclei are congregated in expanded ‘bags’ in the central portion of the receptor area.
- Primary sensory nerve ending is excited by both nuclear bag intrafusal fibres and the nuclear chain fibres. BUT:
- Secondary is usually excited only by nuclear chain fibres.
Describe nuclear chain fibres.
- A type of muscle spindle intrafusal fibre.
- 3-9 in each spindle.
- 1/2 diameter, 1/2 as long as the nuclear bag fibres.
- Have nuclei aligned in a chain throughout the receptor area.
- Primary sensory nerve ending is excited by both nuclear bag intrafusal fibres and the nuclear chain fibres. BUT:
- Secondary is usually excited only by nuclear chain fibres.
Describe the control of intensity of static and dynamic responses by the gamma motor neurons.
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Static response
- Response of both primary and secondary endings to the length of the receptor.
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Dynamic response
- Response of primary ending (BUT NOT SECONDARY) to rate of change of receptor length.
- Gamma motor nerves to muscle spindle are: gamma-dynamic (gamma-d) and gamma-static (gamma-s).
- Gamma-d excite mainly the nuclear bag intrafusal fibres.
- Dynamic response of the muscle spindle is enhanced, but static response is hardly affected.
- Gamma-s excited mainly the nuclear chain intrafusal fibres.
- Enhances static response but has little influence on the dynamic response.