Title: Touch Receptors and Axons
1Touch Receptors and Axons
- Lecture 13
- PSY391S
- John Yeomans
2Receptors in Skin
Hairy and glabrous skin are different.
3Sensitivity and Acuity
- SS receptors much less sensitive than acoustic or
visual receptors. - More receptors in glabrous skin of fingertips,
lips and genitals. - Fewer receptors in back, proximal limbs.
- Better 2-point discrimination when more
receptors, esp. with small receptive fields.
4Adaptation in Single Neurons
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6Pacinian Corpuscles
- Easiest receptor to study due to size and
isolation. - Sensitivity high despite deep location when
vibratory stimuli used. - Fire at onset and removal of 1 s stimulus--Fast
adapting. - Adaptation due to capsule absorbing energy--No
adaptation when naked axons are directly
stimulated.
7Receptive Field
Receptive field is part of the environment to
which a neuron responds.
8 Single Neurons in Human Hand
- Microelectrodes in nerves isolate single neuron
action potentials from large axons. - 4 types of neurons, consistent with 4 receptor
types in other animals. - After studying receptive fields and adaptation,
then microstimulate single axons to evoke
perceptions! - Perceptive fields match receptive fields.
- Valbo and Johansson
9Receptive Fields and Adaptation
Glabrous skin of palm and fingertips. Recordings
of single axons from median or ulnar nerves.
Valbo and Johansson
104 Different Feelings from Stimulation of Single
Axons
- Pacinian No feeling unless gt10 action
potentials, then deep vibration. - Meissners 1 AP leads to tap. gt10 leads to odd
buzzing or fluttering feeling. - Merkels 4 APs cause light touch like leaf.
10 APs cause stronger touch. - Ruffini No feeling until at least 2 axons, then
tugging sensation. - Labelled lines for touch sensations.
11Axon Types
to 100 A alpha
12Somatosensory Pathways and Cortex
- Lecture 14
- PSY391S
- John Yeomans
13Dorsal Column Pathway
?Trigeminal Nucleus V
A?, Aß fibers
14Dermatomes
Trigeminal V
Double innervation of each skin area.
15Spinothalamic Pathway
Parietal postcentral gyrus
Trigeminal V
16Skin Temperature Sensation
Cool-Menthol R1
Vanilloid R1
Vanilloid-like Ad
CMR1, VR1 C fibers
17Somatosensory Cortex
18Cortex Plasticity in Human
19Cortical Layers and Columns
Mountcastle
20Column Plasticity in Monkey
Cut ulnar nerve?Lose cortical areas
21Lesions of SS Cortex
- Loss of 2-point discrimination.
- Loss of skin temperature discrimination.
- Loss of finest sensitivity and motor control.
22Association Areas ofPosterior Parietal Cortex
- 3D Object Recognition
- Body Form (Amorphosynthesis)
- Hand-Eye Coordination
- Movement and Spatial Perception
23Pain and Analgesia
- Lecture 15
- PSY391S
- John Yeomans
24Pain
- Acute pain signals tissue damage.
- Chronic Pain Syndromes
- Causalgia
- Neuralgia
- Phantom Limb Pain
- Usually involve peripheral nerve damage
(neuropathy), but are sustained by CNS. - Hard to treat.
25Peripheral Pain Mechanisms
26Skin Temperature Sensation
Cool-Menthol R1
Vanilloid R1
Vanilloid-like Ad
27Analgesia Pathways
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29Opiates
- Opium, heroin and morphine.
- Enkephalins
- Endorphins
- Dynorphins
- Receptors mu, delta, kappa.
- Analgesia, reward, drug abuse.
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31Muscles and Reflexes
- Lecture 16
- PSY391S
- John Yeomans
32Muscle Types
- Smooth muscles in viscera.
- Striated muscles to skeleton and connective
tissue. - Cardiac muscle--visceral striated muscle with
rhythmic contractions. - Fast-twitch and slow-twitch striated muscles.
33Muscles
34Sliding Filaments
35Muscle Fibers and Inputs
- Extrafusal fibers with alpha motor neurons.
- Intrafusal fibers with gamma motor neurons.
- Neuromuscular junction.
- Ach release by Ca.
- Nicotinic receptors?EPPs?APs
- APs?Ca?Actin and myosin sliding together.
36Neuromuscular Junction
37Muscle Receptors
38Kinesthetic Receptors
- Movements sensed by receptors in muscles, joints
and tendons. - Joint receptors respond to angle of joint.
- Pacinian corpuscles respond to vibration.
- Spindles respond to muscle stretch.
- Golgi tendon organs respond to stronger stretch.
39Spindle Stretch Receptors
40Spindle and Tendon Activation
41Proprioceptive Pathways
- Spinal reflexes--Monosynaptic stretch. Disynaptic
GTO inhibition (clasp-knife). - Dorsal columns to thalamus and motor cortex.
- Spinocerebellar path.
42Motor Units and Rotation
- Motor unit 1 axon and all the fibres
innervated. - Reciprocal inhibition of competing motor units in
ventral horn (flexors vs. extensors). - Size principle--small motor units first.
- Rotation of motor units, by recurrent inhibition
in ventral horn.
43Reflexes
- Monosynaptic stretch reflex.
- Disynaptic tendon reflex (clasp-knife).
- Flexion reflex.
- Scratching and walking.
44Stretch Reflex