Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byAlexander Richard Modified over 9 years ago
1
Touch (discriminative sensation) Proprioception (joint position and movement senses) Pain
2
generic receptor neuronsomatosensory receptor neuron axon
3
Touch (Axon Ending Types)
4
touch receptor endings in skin
5
Ruffini corpuscle, proprioception (senses skin stretch) at rest activated
6
Deep touch, vibrationSkin stretch sensation
7
Meissner corpuscle Merkel disk receptors Light touch
8
Touch Nerve axon types
9
fine touch receptor cutaneous nerve dull pain sharp pain
10
axon diameter (microns) Number of axons touch receptors proprioceptors dull pain “fullness”? sharp pain crude touch heat, cold (itch, tickle?)
11
Touch tracts
12
dorsal columns dorsal ventral touch receptor neuron dorsal roots cuneate fasciculus gracile fasciculus Cuneate fasiculus: upper body Gracile fasiculus: lower body Not facial sensation (done by CNV)
13
dorsal column nuclei (cuneate n. and gracile n.) medial lemniscus VPL (ventral posterior lateral n.) thalamus
14
main sensory trigeminal n. VPM (ventral posterior medial n.) medial lemniscus thalamus trigeminal ganglion Facial Sensation
17
Lesions of SI cause... Loss of ability to localize objects Loss of ability to recognize objects by feel Loss of ability to localize pain Preservation of ability to distinguish modalities (touch, vibration, heat, cold, pain)… but less sensitive to all
19
The map in somatosensory cortex is plastic
20
Lesions of PNS vs CNS Lesion of PNS axon = regeneration and regrowth Lesion of CNS axon = complete cell death
21
Proprioception
22
axon diameter (microns) Number of axons proprioceptors
23
Golgi tendon
24
Golgi tendon organ Signals muscle tension Responds when the muscle actively contracts, but not when an external force pulls on the muscle.
25
Spindle afferents: sense muscle length … it reports the difference between desired and actual length Active relaxation of muscle: no intrafusal lengthening. No spindle afferent response Passive stretch: intrafusal muscle fiber lengthens. Spindle fires a response
26
Proprioceptive information follows 3 pathways... Local (in spinal cord) (results in the stretch reflex)
27
motor neuron inhibitory interneuron muscle spindle afferent Golgi tendon organ +
28
Proprioceptive information follows 3 pathways... To cerebellum (Keeps the cerebellum informed about the actual movements and allows it to coordinate, smooth and refine movements)
29
dorsal nucleus of Clarke
30
external cuneate nucleus dorsal spino- cerebellar tract Tract continues to cerebellum
31
Proprioceptive information follows 3 pathways... To cerebral cortex (We can consciously perceive proprioception.)
33
Pain
34
pain receptor neuron (nociceptor) dorsal horn
35
nociceptor Lissauer’s tract
36
pain & temperature neurons dorsal horn
37
pain receptor neuron (nociceptor) dorsal horn anterior white commissure spinothalamic tract nameless tract
38
spinothalamic tract VMpo (ventral medial nucleus, posterior part) CM (central medial nucleus)
39
spinal trigeminal tract trigeminal ganlion Pain Sensation from Face
40
spinothalamic tract VMpo (ventral medial nucleus, posterior part) spinal trigeminal tract spinal trigeminal nucleus
41
Receptor types in pain-temperature pathway: sharp pain dull pain (aching, burning) heat cold crude touch “fullness” (bladder, stomach, etc.) itch tickle
42
free nerve endings
43
touch receptor cutaneous nerve dull pain (unmyelinated) sharp pain
44
axon diameter (microns) Number of axons touch receptors proprioceptors dull pain “fullness”? sharp pain crude touch heat, cold (itch, tickle?)
45
sharp pain nociceptor = A delta fiber activated by intense mechanical stimulation or high heat (> 45 deg C) polymodal nociceptor = dull pain nociceptor = C fiber activated by substances released by tissue damage and noxious stimuli: Bradykinin Prostaglandins Histamine K + by acid (protons) by heat > 42o C by intense mechanical stimulation by noxious substances (for example, capsaicin) INNERVATES ALL TISSUE EXCEPT THE BRAIN AND LENS OF EYE
46
or thermal
48
Hyperalgesia: intense pain in response to mildly painful stimulus (pinprick) Allodynia: pain in response to completely innocuous stimulus (touch)
49
Referred Pain: heart and left arm pain travel in the same track
50
Descending pain modulation Neurons of the descending pain modulation system are activated by opium and its derivatives (morphine, etc.) Endogenous opioid transmitters endorphins enkephalins dynorphins
51
What activates descending pain modulation system? STRESS! fear hunger thirst fatigue prolonged motor activity hypnosis
53
Excitation of neurons in the rostral medulla causes inhibition of nociceptor neurons in the spinal cord.
54
opiates activate pathway here … and here opiates inhibit nociceptors here
55
Neuropathic pain syndromes: tic douloureux (trigeminal neuralgia) Chronic facial pain from vessels pinching on the trigeminal nerve. The C fibers are the smallest and easiest to stimulate to fire an AP. Treatment: Surgery to reroute the offending vessel
56
Neuropathic pain syndromes: tabes dorsalis The largest axons in the dorsal root ganglia (a beta and proprioceptors) are systematically destroyed. The dorsal columns degenerate. Patient looses discriminative touch and proprioception. Locomotion becomes awkward and stumbling. Also suffers from “lightening-like” stabbing pain
57
Neuropathic pain syndromes: thalamic pain Spontaneous burning or crushing pain on one side of the body May be from lesion in VMpo or MD??? Narcotic meds not effective electrical stimulation of precentral gyrus can improve symptoms
58
Neuropathic pain syndromes: phantom limb pain Narcotics not very effective From reorganization of the somatoscopic maps?
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.