Session 3: Somatic Sensation and the Sensory Pathway Flashcards
Describe the receptors of afferent neurones
Afferent neurones have receptors at their peripheral endings, which continuously inform the CNS of the conditions within the external or internal environment.
A receptor may be the bare terminal of the afferent neurone, or a specialised structure at the nerve ending e.g. a Pacinian corpuscle or it may be a separate receptor cell such as a rod cell in the eye, which makes a synaptic connection with the afferent nerve.
These receptors generate action potentials which are conducted to the CNS.
Afferent information may a) enter consciousness to give rise to our perception of the world around us, b) lead to an efferent output altering motor behaviour, c) change our state of arousal and/or d) may be stored in memory for future reference.
Sensory receptors can be classified by structure (e.g. free nerve endings or encapsulated), by location (e.g. exteroreceptors and interoreceptors) or by stimulus type (e.g. thermoreceptors)
What is meant by Sensory Modality?
We are responsive to a variety of stimuli – the stimulus modalities – e.g. heat, light, chemical change, mechanical pressure etc. Qualities are the subdivisions of the modality such as taste can be divided into sweet, sour etc.
Sensory receptors respond preferentially to one modality e.g. mechanoreceptor, photoreceptor, chemoreceptor, nociceptor (pain), although exceptionally they may be activated by others.
The eye responds preferentially to light although with a blow to the head, a mechanical stimulus, we may “see stars”.
Sensation therefore is dependent on the type of receptor activated.
Adequate stimulus: the stimulus to which a receptor has the lowest threshold. Hence, light is the adequate stimulus from the eye.
Loss of specificity with strong stimuli.
What is meant by Sensory Transduction?
When a stimulus impinges upon a receptor, it causes a change in its membrane potential to change in the permeability to ions of the receptor membrane, which is proportional to stimulus intensity.
- Stimulus evokes change in the permeability to ions of the receptor membrane.
- Causing receptor potential (movement of ions across the receptor membrane)
- Transmitted into nerve fibre as a generator potential
- Action potentials (nerve impulse) propagated in primary afferent fibre to CNS.
This change affects the action potential generating regions of the nerve, to set off a series of action potentials, which encode information about the intensity, and duration of the stimulus.
How is Sensory Transduction achieved?
This is achieved by two mechanisms:
- Frequency coding whereby strength can be determined by rate of action potential stimulus (ie. Increased, higher frequency of action potential means a stronger stimulus).
- Activation of neighbouring cells, as a stronger stimulus will activate neighbouring cells (but to a lesser degree compared to frequency coding).
As all afferent nerves transmit information in the form of action potentials, knowledge of the nature and location of the stimulus depends upon the connections afferent nerve fibres make within the CNS.
What is meant by Receptor Adaptation?
Some receptors – slowly-adapting tonic receptors – respond continuously to the presence of an adequate stimulus e.g. joint and pain receptors
Others – phasic receptors – rapidly adapt - respond maximally and briefly so that the action potential frequency in the afferent nerve decreases during a maintained stimulus e.g. touch receptors.
Such receptors are sensitive to change in stimulus energy.
What is meant by Sensory Acuity?
where is the stimulus?
Each sensory neurone responds to a stimulus only if the stimulus falls within its receptive field. Acuity is the precision by which a stimulus can be located.
The size of the receptive field varies with receptor density. E.g. we have very few touch receptors on the trunk so each one has a large receptive field. On our fingertips however, we have a high density of receptors with small receptive fields. Receptive fields overlap with neighbouring receptive fields.
Sensory acuity can be determined by 3 factors (lateral inhibition in the CNS, two point discrimination, synaptic convergence and divergence):
How does lateral inhibition in the CNS enhance acuity?
Lateral inhibition in the CNS involves the primary afferent fibre whose receptive field centre is closest to the point of stimulus will produce more action potentials than those on the periphery. This works by the primary afferent neurones synapsing with inhibitory interneurons as well as the second order neurones, which act with a negative impact on the adjacent second order neurone. As a consequence, action potentials in the second order neurones whose receptive fields are towards the periphery of the stimulus field are more strongly inhibited, and therefore produce fewer action potentials, than the cell with its receptive field in the centre. These differences in receptor density are reflected in the topographical map of the primary somatosensory cortex.
What is meant by two-point discrimination? And how can convergence and divergence be used to describe acuity?
The smaller the receptive field in a region the higher our acuity i.e. our ability to locate the stimulus accurately and to distinguish between two closely applied stimuli (two point discrimination).
Two point discrimination is the minimal distance required to perceive two simultaneously applied skin indentations; depending on the part of the body involved depends on the two point discrimination distance. This distance is determined by the density of the receptors (3-4 times greater in fingertips than other areas of hand, also very dense in the lips) and the size of the specific neuronal receptive field (which is the area in which the receptors from one area cover e.g. fingertips 1-2mm, palm 5-10mm). Two-point discrimination is also determined by psychological factors e.g. fatigue and stress.
Convergence and divergence can be used to describe acuity. Convergence (e.g of several first order neurones to one second order neurone) decreases acuity whereas divergence causes amplification (more actions projecting up to the second order neurone)
Describe the coding of Sensation
Property of Stimulus: Mechanism of coding
Stimulus Modality: Type of receptor stimulated and specific sensory pathway to the brain
Rate of change: Receptor adaptation
Location: Size of receptive field – enhanced by lateral inhibition and the projection to a particular area of the somatosensory cortex
Intensity: Frequency of action potentials and the number of receptors activated
Describe how we feel sensation at the thalamic level
Thalamic Level
- Crude localization and discrimination of stimuli (not precise)
- Highly organized, very precise projections to cortex (to post-central gyrus of the parietal lobe)
- Thalamic lesions e.g. stroke, can create thalamic overreaction (exaggerated response – much stronger than normal e.g. pain is much more exaggerated than normal). The projections can get confused or mixed up – some patients can have cross-contamination of their senses e.g. synaesthesia.
Describe how we feel sensation at the Somatosensory Cortex, including what is the Sensory Homunculus?
Sharp localisation and full recognition of qualities of modalities – very well structured pathways
Cortical columns
Somatotopic representation – every body area has specific cortical representation
The sensory homunculus (contralateral representation): the relative size of each area is reflective of the degree of sensory acuity associated with that body area
The cerebral cortex has full sensory representation of the body’s surface/skin
Most sensory signals will result in conscious sensory awareness of the signal and recognition of the part of the body from which it is arising.
The left side of the body is represented in the right cerebral cortex
The right side of the body is represented in the left cerebral cortex
The cerebral cortex can be said to house a distorted sensory clone of its respective individual. This the Sensory homunculus.
What is Perception?
Perception is our awareness of stimuli and our ability to discriminate between different types of stimuli – analysing the information
- Perception detection: what has changed?
- Magnitude estimation: how large is the change?
- Spatial discrimination: where is it?
- Feature abstraction: generally, what type of stimulus?
- Quality discrimination: specifically, what type of subtype of stimulus is it?
- Pattern recognition: is this familiar, unfamiliar, significant to me?
Somatosensory cortex:
- Somatosensory cortex relays to other cortical and sub-cortical areas.
- Choice to respond to stimulus taken at the cortical level e.g. is it a nice stimulus? Or is it a threat?
- Lesion of sensory cortex can lead to loss of submodalities: e.g. in repeated epileptic events, loss of two-point discrimination, astereognosis (unable to work out what they are touching if they have their eyes closed).
What is Sensation?
Sensation can be defined as a ‘conscious or sub-conscious awareness of an external or internal stimulus’. The senses can be divided down into general senses, of which can be somatic (from the body of tactile – (touch, pressure, vibration), thermal – (warm, cold), pain or proprioception). General senses can also be visceral (from the internal organs). General senses are different to special senses (smell, taste, vision, hearing, balance).
Describe the Somatosensory System
The somatosensory system can be described by 3 neurones that synapse, described as primary, secondary and tertiary neurones.
First order neurones (or the primary afferent neurones) pass the electrical stimulus from the action potential, synapse with the second order neurone in the spinal cord, when then ascends to the brain to synapse with the third order neuron. Second order neurones can decussate therefore some pathways are contralateral.
The initial sensory receptors of first order neurones can vary yet all act to pick up stimuli and send to the CNS; the most common type is the free nerve ending, yet others include encapsulated nerve endings or those with additional specialised cells for activation. Primary afferent fibres have cell bodies in the trigeminal or dorsal root ganglion.
Descibe the types of stimulus modalities and senosry receptors
Stimulus modalities include light, touch, temperature, chemical changes (e.g. taste) etc. Qualities are a subdivision of modality e.g. taste can be dvided into sweet, sour, salt etc. Sensory receptors are modality specific (to a point e.g. trauma to the eye can lead to you seeing light – because the stimulus is so strong to the rods cones).
Those found in the skin used for sensation are Merkel discs (vibration, pressure and texture) found in the epidermis, Meissner’s Corpuscle (light touch and vibration), Riffini Corpuscle (temperature) and Pacinian Corpuscle (vibration and pressure).
The skin contains a whole variety of specialised receptors for different types of stimuli, most of which are found in the dermis therefore any third degree burn will destroy all of these pain receptors such that the patient will not feel any pain initially with a full thickness burn.
What are Proprioceptors
Proprioceptors are used to determine where the body is in space and allows the body to be able to function properly. Two main types of receptors are present for proprioception to function effectively:
Muscle spindle tells about the length of the muscle. Receptor density is low in large muscle for coarse movement and high in muscles for fine movement e.g. hand and extraoccular muscles.
Golgi tendon organ measures the tension in the tendons
What happens in Shingles?
Herpes zoster, the virus which normally causes chicken pox, infects neurones of the peripheral nervous system particularly cells in the dorsal root ganglia.
After an initial infection with chicken pox, the virus may remain dormant, often for many years, before it is reactivated in some way to produce the condition known as shingles.
Shingles increases the sensitivity of dorsal root neurones triggering burning, tingling sensations, which are extremely painful – the skin becomes scaly and then blisters.
As the virus is usually restricted to only one or two dorsal root ganglia, the body areas affected by shingles reflect the dermatomal distribution of these dorsal roots.
What is required to ‘feel’ the sensation?
‘Feeling’ the Sensation: for a sensation to be felt once the action potential has reached the CNS, there are two major regions of the brain involved:
Thalamic level is used for crude localisation and distribution of the stimuli and produces highly organised projections to the cortex. Any thalamic lesions (e.g. following a stroke) can result in ‘thalamic overreaction’.
Somatosensory cortex (post-central gyrus) receives projections from the thalamus and acts to localise and recognise the qualities of the modalities received; this is found in the post-central gyrus.
The somatosensory cortex will then relay the information to other areas and allow further choice to respond to the stimulus to be taken.
What are the two main functions of neuronal cell bodies?
The spinal cord is an assembly of neuronal cell bodies and axons of nerves collected as bundles or fibre tracts all housed together within the vertebral column.
Neuronal cell bodies have two main functions:
Serving local functions of a neuronal segment (i.e. neural level of the spinal cord)
- Local reflexes (brain not involved)
- Sensory functions of the neural segment to which they belong (dermatome)
- Supplying muscles of their local neuronal segment (myotome)
- They also receive and carry out commands to enact movements through supplying myotomes
Relaying Sensory Information to the Brain
- Some cell bodies receive and in turn send sensory signals to the brain
- Such neurones have long axons that collect as fibre bundles that travel together to higher centres of the brain
- Collections of axons with similar origins and destinations are known as fibre tracts or fasciculi
- Such axons are said to “ascend” because their signals are sent to higher levels of the neuraxis (e.g. Cerebral Cortex), hence they are also known as “ascending fibre tracts”
What are the functions of the axonal fibres of the spinal cord?
Carry sensory information from the surface of the body and muscles to the brain. (There are many fasciculi of ascending tracts)
Carry motor commands from the brain to cell bodies of spinal motoneurones
They are collectively known as descending tracts
There are many fasciculi of descending tracts