Title: Sensory Systems
1Sensory Systems
1. Visual
Distal senses
2. Auditory
Proximal senses
acoustic
vestibular
3. Somatosensory
cutaneous
proprioceptive
4. Gustatory
5. Olfactory
2Somatosensory Systems
cutaneous proprioceptive
3Adequate Stimulus A stimulus of a quality and
of sufficient intensity to excite a sensory
receptor.
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5Adequate Stimuli for Somatosensation
Thermal (infrared radiation, contact)
Touch (light touch, pressure, vibration)
Pain and Itch (chemical, thermal, mechanical)
Proprioception (mechanical stretch or pressure)
6Cutaneous subsystems
epicritic location vibration texture shape pr
otopathic pain temperature itch and tickle
7Receptive field
That part of the periphery to which a cell
responds.
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11Meissners
Merkels
60 hz vibration
Pressure
Pacinian
Ruffinis
Free nerve ending
Pain
Stretch
200 hz vibration
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14Summation of responses of different receptors
(spatial summation).
15Coding of intensity by increased rate (temporal
summation).
16Epricritic, or non-pain Somatosensation
17As in the retina, receptive fields vary in
size. Smaller receptive fields greater
acuity two-point discrimination
18Center-surround organization of
cutaneous receptive fields results in lateral
inhibition. Serves to enhance contrast
19Protopathic, or pain Somatosensation
20Pain Receptors
Called Nociceptors
- Free nerve endings that respond to
- mechanical stimuli
- thermal stimuli
- chemical stimuli, or
- all three
- (polymodal receptors)
21Free nerve endings of unmyelinated C fibers
or thinly myelinated Ad fibers
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23Cutaneous classified by conduction velocity
Proprioceptive classified by axon diameter
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26 Substance Effect Potassium activation
Bradykinin activation Histamine activation
Prostaglandins sensitization Substance
P sensitization
27Gate control theory of pain control
Transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation may
act via gate control
28Referred Pain
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31CN V and VII
32Parallel Processing in the Somatosensory System
Lemniscal System (non-pain epicritic)
Extralemniscal System (pain protopathic) Spinot
halamic pathways Neospinothalamic Paleospinoth
alamic Spinomesencephalic
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38Neospinothalamic Pathway
39Paleospinothalamic Pathway
40Spinomesencephalic Pathway
41Descending control of pain
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45Sensory System Summary
1. Sensory systems detect change
over space (lateral inhibition to enhance
contrast) over time (rapidly adapting)
2. Detect features
3. Structures are laminated (cells in layers)
4. Parallel pathways
5. Hierarchical processing
6. Topographical organization
7. Non-uniform receptive fields
8. Extreme sensitivity, wide dynamic range
9. Non-linear response