Reflexes Flashcards
What is the simplest reflex?
The stretch reflex
Where is the stretch reflex found?
In all muscles
What are examples of the stretch reflex?
Pattelar tendon
Knee jerk reflex
What does the stretch reflex use?
Information from muscle spindles which monitor muscle length
What is the stretch reflex?
Follows a sharp tap to an inelastic tendon
What is the process of the stretch reflex?
- Force is transmitted to muscle fibres
- Stretch activates sensory nerves in muscle spindles
- Increases the numbers of action potentials in afferent nerves projected through the dorsal horn into the spinal cord
What are the three connections that the spindle sensory afferent devides into?
- Activates alpha motor neurons to the muscle which was stretched (rapid contraction of the agonist muscle)
- Connects indirectly with and influences the antagonist muscle (agonist muscle relaxes, stretches)
- Dorsal columns and makes connection in the somatosensory cortex (tells the brain about the length of the muscle)
During the stretch reflex, what kind of loop is the activation of the alpha motor neurons to the stretched muscle?
Monosynaptic reflex that is a negative feedback loop
During the stretch reflex, why does the antagonist muscle relax when the agonist muscle contracts?
Spindle afferent activates inhibitory interneurons which stop the activation of alpha motor neurons to the antagonist muscle
What is the inverse stretch reflex?
Caused by afferent neuron from golgi tendon organs
Muscle contracts and shortens
Pulls on tendon and Ib sensory nerves from the GTO increases firing of APs
What is the process of the inverse stretch reflex?
- Activation of inhibitory interneurons to agonist muscle (decrease in contraction strength)
- Activation of exitatory interneurons to antagonist muscle
- Information sent through the dorsal column to somatosensory complex
What is the inverse stretch reflex also called?
Clasp knife
Golgi tendon organ reflex
What does the inverse stretch reflex prevent?
The inverse stretch reflex prevents the muscle form contracting so hard that the tendon insertion is torn away from the bone
What is the flexor (withdrawal) reflex?
Uses information from pain receptors
Withdraws part of the body away from pain stimuli
How does the flexor reflex happen?
Increased aciton potentials cause:
- Increased activity in flexor muscles (excites more neurons)
- Antagonistic extensors are inhibited at the same time by a number of exitatory and inhibitory reflexors
- To prevent you falling over extends to the contralateral limbs by excitatory interneurons cross spinal cord excite the contralateral extendors
- At the same time inhibition of contralateral flexors
- Sensory information goes to the brain in the contralateral spinothalamic tract