Title: THE PERIPHERAL NERVOUS SYSTEM AND REFLEX ACTIVITY
1THE PERIPHERAL NERVOUS SYSTEM AND REFLEX
ACTIVITY
2PNS in the Structural Organization of the Nervous
system
3SENSORY RECEPTORS AND SENSATION
4SENSORY RECEPTORS
- Sensory receptors are specialized to respond to
changes in their environment called stimuli - Receptors my be classified according to the
activating stimulus - Receptors may be classified based on their
location or the location of the activating
stimulus - Receptors may be classified based on their
overall structural complexity
5SENSORY RECEPTORS
- Free, or naked, nerve endings are present
everywhere in the body and respond primarily to
pain and temperature - Encapsulated Dendritic Endings
- Meissners corpuscles are receptors for
discriminatory and light touch in hairless areas
of the body - Pacinian, or lamellated, corpuscles, are
stimulated when deep pressure is first applied - Ruffinis corpuscles respond to deep and
continuous pressure - Muscle spindles detect when a muscle is being
stretched and initiate a reflex that resists the
stretch - Golgi tendon organs are stimulated when the
associated muscle stretches the tendon - Joint kinesthetic receptors monitor the stretch
in the articular capsules of synovial joints
6OVERVIEW FROM SENSATION TO PERCEPTION
- The somatosensory system, the part of the sensory
system serving the body wall and limbs, involve
the receptor level, the circuit level, and the
perceptual level - Processing at the receptor level involves a
stimulus that must excite a receptor in order for
sensation to occur - Processing at the circuit level is involved with
delivery of impulses to the appropriate region
of the cerebral cortex for stimulus localization
and perception - Processing at the parceptual level involves
interpretation of sensory input in the cerebral
cortex
7SOMATOSENSORY SYSTEM
8TRANSMISSION LINES NERVES AND THEIR
STRUCTURE AND REPAIR
9NERVES AND ASSOCIATED GANGLIA
- A nerve is a cordless organ consisting of
parallel bundles of peripheral axons enclosed by
connective tissue wrappings - Ganglia are collections of neuron cell bodies
associated with nerves in the PNS - If damage to a neuron occurs to the axon and the
cell body remains intact, cut or compressed axons
can regenerate
10NERVE STRUCTURE
11NERVE REGENERATION
12CRANIAL NERVES
- Olfactory nerves are responsible for smell
- Optic nerves are responsible for vision
- Oculomotor nerves play a role in eye movement
- Trochlear nerves play a role in eye movement
- Trigeminal nerves are general sensory nerves of
the face - Abducens nerves play a role in eye movement
- Facial nerves function as the chief motor nerves
of the face - Vestibulocochlear nerves are responsible for
hearing and equilibrium - Glossopharyngeal nerves innervate part of the
tongue and pharynx - Vagus nerves innervate the heart, lungs, and the
abdominal organs - Accessory nerves move structures associated with
the head and neck - Hypoglossal nerves are mixed nerves that arise
from the medulla and serve the tongue
13CRANIAL NERVES
14CRANIAL NERVES
15SPINAL NERVES
- Thirty-one pairs of mixed spinal nerves arise
from the spinal cord and serve the entire body
except the head and neck - Innervation of Specific Body Regions
- Each spinal nerve connects to the spinal cord by
a dorsal root and a ventral root - Rami lie distal to and are lateral branches of
the spinal nerves that carry both motor and
sensory fibers - The back is innervated by the dorsal rami with
each rami innervating the muscle in line with the
point of origin from the spindle column - Only in the thorax are the ventral rami arranged
in a simple segmental pattern corresponding to
that of the dorsi rami - The cervical plexus is formed by the ventral rami
of the first four cervical nerves - The brachial plexus is situated partly in the
neck and partly in the axilla and gives rise to
virtually all the nerves that innervate the upper
limb - The sacral and lumbar plexuses overlap and
because many fibers of the lumber plexus
contribute to the sacral plexus via the
lumbosacral trunk, the two plexuses are often
referred to as the lumbosacral plexus - The area of skin innervated by the cutaneous
branches of a single nerve is called a dermatone - Hintons law states that any nerve serving a
muscle that produces movement at a joint also
innervates the joint and the skin over the joint
16SPINAL NERVES
17FORMATION OF SPINAL NERVES
18RAMI DISTRIBUTION OF THE SPINAL NERVE
19CERVICAL PLEXUS
20BRACHIAL PLEXUS
21BRACHIAL PLEXUS
22LUMBAR PLEXUS
23SACRAL PLEXUS
24DERMATOMES
25MOTOR ENDINGSANDMOTOR ACTIVITY
26PERIPHERAL MOTOR ENDINGS
- Peripheral motor endings are the PNS element that
activates effectors by releasing
neurotransmitters - The terminals of the somatic motor fibers that
innervate voluntary muscles form elaborate
neuromuscular junctions with their effector cells
and they release the neurotransmitter
acetylcholine - The junctions between autonomic motor endings and
the visceral effectors involve varicosities and
release either acetylcholine or epinephrine as
their neurotransmitter
27OVERVIEW OF MOTOR INTEGRATIONFROM INTENTION
TO EFFECT
28LEVELS OF MOTOR CONTROL
- The segmental level is the lowest level on the
motor control hierarchy and consists of the
spinal cord circuits - The projection level has direct control of the
spinal cord - The precommand level is made up of the cerebellum
and the basal nuclei and is the highest level of
the motor system hierarchy
29LEVELS OF MOTOR CONTROL
30REFLEX ACTIVITY
31THE REFLEX ARC
- Reflexes are unlearned, rapid, predictable motor
responses to a stimulus, and occur over highly
specific neural pathways called reflex arc
32THE REFLEX ARC
33SPINAL REFLEXES
- Spinal reflexes are somatic reflexes mediated by
the spinal cord - In the stretch reflex the muscle spindle is
stretched and excited by either an external
stretch or an internal stretch - The Golgi tendon reflex produces muscle
relaxation and lengthening in response to
contraction - The flexor, or withdrawal, reflex is initiated by
a painful stimulus and causes automatic
withdrawal of the threatened body part from the
stimulus - They crossed extensor reflex is a complex spinal
reflex consisting of an ipsilateral withdrawal
reflex and a contralateral extensor reflex - Superficial reflexes are elicited by gentle
cutaneous stimulation
34Anatomy of the Spindle and Golgi Tendon Organ
35Operation of the Muscle Spindle
36STRETCH REFLEX
37DEEP GOLGI TENDON REFLEX
38CROSSED EXTENSOR REFLEX
39PAIN TRANSMISSIOM
40DEVELOPMENTAL ASPECTS OF THE PERIPHERAL NERVOUS
SYTEM
- The Spinal Nerves branch from the developing
spinal cord and adjacent neural crest and exit
between the forming vertebrate - Each nerve becomes associated with the adjacent
muscle mass - Cranial Nerves innervate muscles of the head in a
similar way - Sensory Receptors atrophy to some degree with
age, and there is a decrease in muscle tone in
the face and neck, reflexes occur a bit more
slowly