Somatosensation Flashcards

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1
Q

Types

A

Temperature (thermoception), pressure (mechanoception), pain (nocicpetion), position (proprioception)

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2
Q

Timing

A

non-adapting, slow-adapting, fast-adapting

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3
Q

Location

A

location-specific nerves to brain

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4
Q

Adaptation

A

change over time of receptor to a constant stimulus- down regulation. Ex: as you push down with hand, receptors experience constant pressure, but after few seconds receptors no longer fire
Important bc if cell is overexcited cell can die. Ex: if too much pain signal in pain receptor (capsaicin), cell can die.

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5
Q

Amplification

A

up regulation. Ex: light hits photoreceptor in eye and can cause cell to fire. When cell fires AP, can be connected to 2 cells which also fire AP and so on

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6
Q

Somatosensory Homunculus

A

sensory cortex: contains homonculus
info from body ends up in this somatosensory cortex
if there was a brain tumor, to figure out what part it’s in neurosurgeons can touch different parts of cortex and stimulate them. If surgeon touches part of cortex patients can say they feel it. Do it to make sure they aren’t removing parts in sensation.
This creates topological map of body in cortex

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7
Q

Proprioception

A

balance/position
tiny little sensors located in our muscles that goes up to spinal cord and to the brain. Sensitive to stretching
Sensors contract with muscles so we can tell how contracted or relaxed every muscle in our body is
cognitive awareness

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8
Q

Kinaesthesia

A

movement of body, more behavioral. does not include sense of balance, proprioception does

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9
Q

Pain

A

nociception

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10
Q

Temperature

A

thermoception

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11
Q

TrypV1 receptor

A

helps sense temperature, sensitive to pain.
when cell is poked thousands of cells are broken up and releases different molecules that bind to this receptor, causes change in conformational change which activates the cell and sends signal to brain

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12
Q

Conformational change

A

heat causes this in the protein

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13
Q

A-beta fibres

A

fast ones, thick and covered in myelin (less resistance, high conductance)

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14
Q

A-delta fibres

A

smaller diameter, less myelin

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15
Q

C fibres

A

small diameter, unmyelinated (lingering sense of pain)

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16
Q

Mechanism

A

pain changes conformation of receptors
capsaicin binds TrypV1 receptor in tongue and triggers same response