Spinal reflexes Flashcards
What are features of a spinal reflex?
- Require stimulation
- Fast, due to few synapses
- Involuntary, intact even if spinal cord severed
- Stereotyped, occur in the same way each time. Underlying basic circuitry
What is the patellar reflex and why does it occur?
‘Knee jerk’
- Due to stretching of the thigh extensor muscle
- Tries to correct stretching
What are monosynaptic reflexes?
Involve one synape (very quick)
- Patellar reflex
- Myotactic reflex
Describe what happens during the ‘pint pouring’ reflex in both the bicep and the tricep
- As glass gets heavier, sensory fibre detects stretch in the bicep
- Action potentials from the spinal cord cause the bicep to contract
- Tricep muscles simultaneously relax due to an inhibitory inter-neuron inhibiting the firing of the motor neuron to the tricep
What is ‘reciprocal inhibition’?
Muscles on the opposite side of the limb relax to accommodate contraction on the other side
What do proprioceptors do and what are 2 examples?
They detect body position and movement in time and space
- Muscle spindle
- Golgi tendon organ
Where are muscle spindles located in the body and what do they detect?
- Deep within the muscle fibres of striated muscle
- Detect stretch
What do the Ia sensory muscle fibres in a muscle spindle do?
- Innovate the muscle spindle with their ends wrapping around the spindle fibres
- Detect stretch of the muscle spindle
- Provide feedback to alpha motor neurons about the degree of stretch occuring
What do the gamma motor neurons in a muscle spindle do?
- Stimulate intrafusaal muscle fibres to adjust tension to prevent slack
- Maintain muscle length by making the muscle spindle contract when surrounding muscle contracts
Where are golgi tendon organs located in the body and what do they detect?
- Wrap around tendons
- Detects muscle tension due to contraction and counteracts it
How do golgi tendon organs conteract stretch?
- Activation of sensory Ib afferents activate inhibitory interneurons and this inhibits alpha motor neurons that innovate the same muscle
- Negative feedback prevents damage
What is the parallel after-discharge circuit?
- Multiple parallel pathways of different numbers of excitatory interneurons
- Immediate response but also sustained response
What reflex uses the parallel after-discharge circuit?
Flexor (withdrawal) reflex