Sensory receptors Flashcards
What is the role of sensory receptors?
Sensory receptors change sensory stimuli (touch, temperature, etc) into nerve signals that ate conveyed and processes in the CNS This can be about the External or Internal environment
What are mechanoreceptors?
Mechanoreceptors detect mechanical compression or stretching of the receptor or of tissues adjacent to the receptor
What are the 2 types of Mechanoreceptors and their features?
Skin tactile sensibilities (epidermis and dermis) - Free nerve endings (touch) - Expanded tip endings (Merkels dics and several other variants) - Spray endings - Ruffini’s endings - Encapsulated endings (Meissners corpuscles + Krause’s corpuscles) - Hair end organs Deep tissue sensibilities - Free nerve endings - Expanded tip endings - Spray endings (Ruffini’s endings) - Encapsulated endings (pacinian corpuscles + few other variants) - Muscle endings - Muscle spindles - Golgi tendon receptors
Name all of these different types of Mechanoreceptors found in the skin or deep tissues of the body?
Below
What do free nerve endings sense?
Pain (mechanically-induced)
What are the features of Meissners corpuscle?
Encapsulated nerve endings similar to Pacini’s but much smaller;
detects touch flutter and low frequency vibration AB fibres; glabrous (non-hairy) skin types
Has low activation threshold so is sensitive
Rapidly adapting mechanoreceptor, touch and pressure
What are the features of Merkels corpuscle?
Non-encapsulated nerve endings; detect static touch and light pressure; AB fibres; all skin types
Consists of a specialised epithelial cell + nerve fibre Slowly adapting
Found just under the skin surface (e.g finger tips - good discrimination)
Slowly adapting mechanoreceptor, touch and pressure
Multiple branches often found in an ‘Iggo Dome’
They work with Meissners corpuscles to help determine texture
What are the features of Free neuron ending ?
Slowly adapting, some are nociceptors, some are thermoreceptors, and some are mechanoreceptors
What are the features of Pacinian/pacini’s corpuscle?
Onion like encapsulating nerve endings
Found in deep layers of dermis and detects high. frequency vibration
Rapidly adapting mechanoreceptor, vibration (movement) and deep pressure AB fibres; Glabrous and hairy skin types
Rapidly adapting due to a slick viscous fluid between the layers - more later on adaptation
Has a low activation threshold (i.e is sensitive) - Doesn’t need much stimulus
What are the features of Ruffini corpuscle?
Responds to skin stretch and is located in the deeper layers of the skin as well as tendons and ligaments
Encapsulated nerve endings in all skin types but especially abundant in hands and fingers as well as soles of feet
What kind of sensory receptors are found in the Glabrous and hairy skin (making them cutaneous receptors)?
The cutaneous receptors are; - Merkels cells (touch) - Free nerve endings (pain, temperature) - Meissners corpuscles (vibration) - Ruffini’s corpuscles (lateral stretch) - Pacinian corpuscles (rapid vibration)
What 2 sensory receptors work together to help determine texture?
Merkel disks and Meissners corpuscles
What do skin hair cell receptors do?
Skin hair cell receptors; - There are a number of types of skin hair cell, and each has a mechxnosensitive receptor wrapped around its follicle - These detect both the muscular movements of hair (erector muscle) and the external displacements of the hair
What receptors are involved in the second group of mechanoreceptors and what are their functions?
Hearing - Sound receptors of cochlea Equilibrium - Vestibular receptors for balance and equilibrium Arterial pressure - Baroreceptors of carotid sinuses and aorta
What is the role of thermoreceptors?
Thermoreceptors detect changes in temperature, with some receptors detecting cold and other warmth (has them internally and externally)
What is the role of Nociceptors ?
Nociceptors are pain receptors which detect physical or chemical damage occurring in the tissues; Free nerve endings
What its the role of Electromagnetic receptors?
Electromagnetic receptors detect light on the retina of the eye; Vision via rods and cones
What is the role of Chemoreceptors ?
Chemoreceptors detect taste in the mouth, smell in the nose, oxygen level in the arterial blood, osmolality of the body fluids, carbon dioxide concentration, and other factors that. make up the chemistry of the body.
What is the function of chemoreceptors and where are they found ?
• Taste — Receptors of taste buds • Smell — Receptors of olfactory epithelium • Arterial oxygen — Receptors of aortic and carotid bodies • Osmolality — Neurons in or near supraoptic nuclei • Blood CO2 — Receptors in or on surface of medulla and in aortic and carotid bodies • Blood glucose, amino acids, fatty acids — Receptors in hypothalamus