Somatosensation II Flashcards
What are the 2 major pathways of the somatosensory system?
The 2 major pathways are:
- Dorsal column-medial lemniscal system (DCML)
- Spinothalamic tract (STT)
What is the role of the DCML?
Receives input from large A-β fibres detecting Proprioception, touch,
What is the function of the STT?
Receives input from small C and ẟ fibres detecting Pain
How is pain detection mediated?
Ascending pathways mediate sensory aspects of pain for body and face
Which thalamic nuclei receive input about pain?
2nd order neurons decussate and project to ventral-posterior nuclear complex of thalamus
- VPL: body
- VPM: face
What are the 2 aspects of the dual aspect pain model
- Sensory-discriminative
2. Affective motivational
What is the sensory discriminative part of the dual aspect pain model?
- Sensory-discriminative
- Location
- Intensity
- Duration
- Quality
Describe the Affective motivational part of the dual aspect pain model
- Affective motivational
- Unpleasantness – the painfulness of pain
- Effects on arousal, mood (affect), behaviour
Which receptors detect pain?
Nociceptors are neurons specialized for detection of painful stimuli
How are nociceptors activated?
Nociceptors respond to warmth as skin fibre temperature raises, the rate of firing of action potentials increases up to a certain point
How do the 2 somatosensory pathways respond to pain?
A-δ (DCML) and C-fibres (STT) contribute different aspects of pain sensation
A-δ fibres are thinly myelinated and moderately fast conducting ~30mm/s
C fibres are thin and unmyelinated - slow conduction 1mm/s
How does nociceptor transduction vary?
Tactile mechanoreceptors have mechanically sensitive ion channels sensitive to stretch - specialised endings in merkel’s depolarise to cause action potential firing
Thermoreceptors have a range of ion channels that act as transducers
What receptor is responsible for dealing with noxious heat stimuli?
The TRPV1 receptor is involved in transduction of noxious heat
Originally called vanilloid receptor, present in A-δ and C-fibres
How is the TRPV1 receptor activated?
Ion channel permeable to Na+ and K+ opened by heat and acid
Explain why we still feel burning even after the noxious heat stimuli is removed
Following the removal of noxious stimulus, an ‘Inflammatory soup’ of cytokines, prostaglandins and small signalling molecules maintains depolarisation and sensitivity of C-fibre terminals after the original stimulus