Term
Describe the anatomical organization of the Nervous System |
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Definition
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Term
What are the components of the central nervous system? |
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Definition
-Brain (cerebrun, brainstem, cerebellum)
-Spinal cord |
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Term
The CNS is encased in ___________ and protected by ______ |
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Definition
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Term
Is the PNS surrounded by dura mater or BBB? |
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Definition
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Term
What are the components of the PNS? |
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Definition
-Autonomic NS
-Somatosensory NS
-Somatic NS |
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Term
What are the components of the ANS? |
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Definition
-parasympathetic
-sympathetic
-enteric |
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Term
What is the function of the somatosensory NS? Is sensory afferent or efferent? |
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Definition
-carries sensory information to the CNS
-sensoryis afferent |
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Term
What is the function of the somatic NS? Are motor signals afferent or efferent? |
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Definition
-voluntary movement
-motor is efferent |
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Term
How do the spinal nn and cranial nn of the PNS innervate the body? |
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Definition
-Spinal nn: pairs branch into small nn and innervate the limbs, trunk, and caudal region
-Cranial nn: pairs innervate the head and neck |
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Term
Definition and Function: Sensory neurons |
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Definition
-carry info from the body to the spinal cord or brain stem=> then to the cerebellum and cerebrum for interpretation OR form a reflex arc in the spinal cord
-Function: body position and balance, touch, pain, temp, and the special senses of taste, hearing, vision, and smell |
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Term
Definition and Function: Motor neurons |
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Definition
-carry responses to the sensory signals from the spinal cord and brain back to the body
-Function: regulate voluntary movements and muscle control |
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Term
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Definition
-bundles of motor neuron axons in the spinal cord |
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Term
Motor neurons are mono/multi-synaptic, innervate ________, and have ____ as a neurotransmitter. |
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Definition
-monosynaptic
-muscle
-ACh |
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Term
Where does motor function originate? |
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Definition
-cerebrum at motor cortex, cerebellum, and spinal cord |
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Term
What is the end point of motor function? |
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Definition
-motor endplate (neuromuscular junction) |
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Term
Cell bodies of motor neurons in ________ of spinal cord. Neurons exit through the _______ root. |
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Definition
-ventral grey horn
-ventral |
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Term
Brachial plexus innervates the TL/PL and the lumbosacral plexus innervates the TL/PL. |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
I. Olfactory (S)
II. Optic (S)
III. Oculomotor (M)
IV. Trochlear (M)
V. Trigeminal (B)
VI. Abducens (M)
VII. Facial (B)
VIII. Vestibulocochlear (S)
IX. Glossopharyngeal (B)
X. Vagus (B)
XI. Accessory (M)
XII. Hypoglossal (M)
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Term
Cortex + Diencephalon= ________ |
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Definition
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Term
What are the segments of the Diencephalon? What are their functions? |
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Definition
Diencephalon (interbrain)= thalamus (relay center) + epithalamus (pineal gland) + hypothalamus (homeostasis, hormone regulation) |
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Term
What are the segments of the cerebral cortex and their functions? |
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Definition
Cerebral Cortex= frontal lobe (motor cortex) + temporal lobe (hearing and proprioception) + parietal lobe (sensory, touch, pain, proprioception) + occipital lobe (vision) |
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Term
What does the midbrain contain? |
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Definition
-CNIII, substantia nigra, pons |
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Term
What does the medulla contain and what does it do? |
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Definition
-cranial nn
-reticular activating system, gait, respiratory center |
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Term
What does the cerebellum do? |
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Definition
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Term
What are the two types of lower motor neurons? What do they innervate? |
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Definition
-General somatic efferent: innervate voluntary skeletal m
-General visceral efferent: innervate involuntary smooth m of the blood vessels and visceral organs, the glands, and cardiac m of the heart |
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Term
LMN track from where to where? UMN? |
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Definition
-LMN: from spinal cord to muscle
-UMN: from brain to spinal cord |
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Term
Which nerve is responsible for the patellar reflex? Flexor or withdrawal reflex? |
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Definition
-Patellar= femoral n
-Flexor or withdrawal= sciatic n |
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Term
Definition: TL Withdrawal |
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Definition
-broad response most of brachial plexus and many n branches
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Term
Definition: Panniculus reflex |
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Definition
-pinch skin triggers contraction of cutaneous trunci m |
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Term
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Definition
-reduction of voluntary motor function |
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Term
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Definition
-absence of voluntary motor function |
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Term
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Definition
-reduction of voluntary motor function in one limb |
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Term
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Definition
-reduction of voluntary motor function of two pelvic limbs |
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Term
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Definition
-reduction of voluntary motor function in the left or right TL |
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Term
Defintion: Tetraparesis/Tetraplegia |
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Definition
-reduction in voluntary motor function in all four limbs |
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Term
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Definition
-exits CNS and innervates a peripheral m |
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Term
What are the clinical signs of a LMN disease? |
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Definition
-Hypo or areflexia: loss of reflex
-Weakness
-Hypotonia or atonia: loss of motor tone
-Neurogenic atrophy |
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Term
What are the UMNs responsible for? |
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Definition
1) Initiate volunatry motor activity: gait generation
2) Maintain m tone to counter gravity and to establish posture
3) control visceral function |
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Term
What are the 5 signs of an UMn disease? |
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Definition
1) Abnormal gait
2) Spasticity: interruption of extensor and flexor activation
3) Paresis (weakness)
4) Hyperreflexia due to loss of inh input
5) Loss of conscious proprioception: ataxia |
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Term
Do UMNs cross the midline? Regardless, what is this called? |
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Definition
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Term
Where would the deficit be if the UMN injury was in the thoracic spinal cord? In the brain? |
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Definition
-if in right, see abnormality on right side
-if in brain would see paralysis on opposite side |
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Term
The efferent neuron of the PNS that connects the m and the spinal cord is the _________ |
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Definition
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Term
The tracts that connect the brain and the efferent spinal neuron and is confined to the CNS known as _________ |
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Definition
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Term
Definition: Sensory transduction |
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Definition
-transduce environmental signals into neural signals, external and internal signals |
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Term
Sensory nn include ______, ______, and ______ nn |
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Definition
-spinal
-peripheral
-cranial |
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Term
Describe sensory transduction |
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Definition
-stimulation of a receptor (by a change in shape or other mechanism) affects ion permeability of the receptor cell mem generating a depolarizing current which can generate an AP in an afferent neuron |
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Term
True or False: Receptors may be a specialized ending of afferent neurons OR separate structures adjacent to the ending of an afferent neuron. |
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Definition
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Term
Outline the Depolarization of Sensory Receptors |
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Definition
stimulus=> Na+ or other ion into receptor=> change in mem potential (depolarization)=> graded response depending on how much Na+ moves into receptor=> no refractory period=> the depolarization of the receptor, if sufficient will trigger an AP at afferent neuron |
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Term
Neurons are ______ cells and have a resting potential maintained by a _________. |
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Definition
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Term
What occurs when threshold potential is reached in a neuron? |
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Definition
Voltage-gated Na channels open=> neuron depolarizes=> propagation along axon=> results in release of neurotransmitter from terminal |
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Term
Strength of signal is conveyed by the ________. How is the quality of the signal conveyed? |
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Definition
-number of APs
-conveyed by the properties of the receptor and the CNS target that are activated |
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Term
Definition: Adaptation
-Is it rapid or slow? |
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Definition
-diminishing of depolarization despite sustained stimulus
-rapid or slow adapting receptors |
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Term
True or False: Receptors differ in how quickly they adapt to stimulus. |
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Definition
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Term
True or False: Receptors differ by the threshold of stimulus to which they respond. |
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Definition
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Term
True or False: There are the same receptors for different modalities. |
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Definition
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Term
What are the 9 different receptors of the sensory NS? |
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Definition
-Somatosensory: mechanical, thermal, proprioception (body in space), nociception (pain)
-vision
-auditory
-olfactory
-gustatory (taste)
-vestibular |
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Term
Definition: General somatic afferent |
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Definition
-peripheral sensory for perception plus trigeminal n |
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Term
Definition: Special sensory afferent |
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Definition
-vision and hearing: cranial n II and VIII |
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Term
Definition: General Proprioception |
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Definition
-general sense of body in space |
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Term
Definition: Special proprioception |
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Definition
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|
Term
Definition: General visceral afferent |
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Definition
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Term
Definition: Special Visceral afferent |
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Definition
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Term
What are the mechanical somatosensory receptors? |
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Definition
-Mechanoreceptors: encapsulated receptors |
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Term
What are the somatosensory receptors of propioception? |
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Definition
-muscle spindle, golgi tendon organs, and joint receptors |
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Term
What are the somatosensory receptors for thermal stimulus? Pain? |
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Definition
-thermal: thermoceptors: free nerve endings
-pain: nociceptors: free nerve endings |
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|
Term
Definition: Low threshold mechanoreceptors |
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Definition
-high sensitivity receptors that trigger APs |
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Term
What are the 4 types of low threshold mechanoreceptors? |
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Definition
-Meissner's corpuscle: rapidly adapting
-Pacini's corpuscle: foot pads, rapidly adapting
-Ruggini's corpuscle: slowly adapting
-Merkel's disks: slowly adapting |
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Term
What kind of stimulus do mechanoreceptors respond to? |
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Definition
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|
Term
Describe mechanoreceptors
-structure?
-response to stimulus?
-adaptation rate? |
|
Definition
-Structure: shaped like an onion-like capsule around fluid center with a free nerve ending of afferent sensory neurons
-Response to stimulus: when compressed, the mem transforms and the channels open=> return to original structure once P is released
-Rapid adaptation due to the slipping of the layers |
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Term
Are first order neurons afferent sensory or efferent motor? Where are their cell bodies located? Where do they track? |
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Definition
-afferent sensory neurons and travel in peripheral nerves
-cell bodies in dorsal root ganglia at each segmental spinal nerve
-dorsal root ganglia=> dorsal root=> dorsal spinal cord=> medulla |
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Term
Low threshold mechanoreceptors use large, myelinated fibers known as ____ |
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Definition
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Term
Sensory from the mechanoreceptors of body travel in _________ tract in dorsal column, long tracts to medulla |
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Definition
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Term
Information from posterior limbs travel medially to the ___________, forelimbs travel to the medial ___________ in the medulla. Most neurons ________ before the thalamus. |
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Definition
-nucleus gracilis
-cuneate cuvleus
-cross |
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Term
Definition: 2nd order neurons |
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Definition
-from medulla to the thalamus
-decussate at the medulla [in the internal arcuate tract] and projects to the thalamus |
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|
Term
Definition: 3rd order neurons |
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Definition
-from thalamus to sensory cortex where topographic maps of the body exist
-part of the cerebral cortex that integrates mechanosensory input= parietal lobe |
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|
Term
|
Definition
-innervated by a spinal nn |
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Term
Definition: Cutaneous zones |
|
Definition
-innervated by peripheral nn |
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Term
Definition: Autonomous zones |
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Definition
-innervated by only one peripheral nn (clinically useful) |
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Term
Why is knowing the autonomous zone of a n clinically useful? |
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Definition
-very helpful in mapping a lesion r |
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|
Term
Definition: Proprioception
-what are its receptors called? |
|
Definition
-the awareness of where ones body is
-proprioceptors: give info on position of limbs and other body regions |
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Term
What are the 3 types of proprioceptors? |
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Definition
-msucle spindles
-golgi tendon organs
-joint receptors |
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Term
Proprioceptors: ________ are located in striated m and ________ are located at the interface of striated m and tendon. |
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Definition
-msucle spindles
-golgi tendon organs |
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Term
Muscle spindle contains ________ muscle fibers within a capsule, embedded in _______ muscle fiber. Responds to _____ and ______, |
|
Definition
-intrafusal
-extrafusal
-length
-rate of stretch |
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Term
Golgi tendon organ proprioceptor responds to ________. |
|
Definition
-force generated/ tension |
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Term
Muslce Spindles and Golgi Tendon Organs: ______ nerve endings around small bundles of ______ or in a ______ matrix b/n muscle and tendon. |
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Definition
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|
Term
How is an AP caused in muscle spindles/golgi tendon organs? |
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Definition
-strretch or tension will mechanically distort the nerve endings causing an AP |
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Term
What are the 2 types of muscle spindles? Which one monitors change in stretch and which reports on static position? |
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Definition
-Ia afferent: rapidly adapting to stretch of the spindle: monitors change in stretch
-II afferent: slowly adapting to stretch of the spindle: reports on static position |
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|
Term
Describe the pathway of conscious proprioception. Unconscious proprioception? |
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Definition
-Conscious: dorsal columns; cross at the medulla (contralateral)
-Unconscious: spinocerebellar; don't cross (ipsilateral) |
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|
Term
Definition: Ataxia
-Types? |
|
Definition
-loss of coordinated movement
-Types: general proprioceptive, vestibular (special proprioceptive), cerebellar proprioception |
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|
Term
Describe General Proprioceptive Ataxia |
|
Definition
-represents a loss of awareness of where thhe limbs are in space
-often occurs with UMN lesions
-loss of postural and placing reactions
-floating hypermetria |
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|
Term
Describe Vestibular Ataxia |
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Definition
-a loss of balance reflected in a head tilt, and a tendency to lean, drift, fall, or roll to one side and nystagmus |
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Term
Describe Cerebellar Ataxia |
|
Definition
-reflects the inability to modulate the gait generating systems in the brain stem
-dysmetria, hypermetria, head tremors, truncal sway, base wide stance |
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|
Term
What are the 2 type of adaptation receptors? |
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Definition
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|
Term
Definition: Tonic Adaptation Receptor |
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Definition
-adapt slowly or not at all; monitor static state |
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|
Term
Definition: Phasic Adaptation Receptor |
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Definition
-adapt rapidly and monitor change in signal |
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|
Term
What are the 2 types of proprioceptors? Describe them. |
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Definition
-Muscle spindles: Ia fibers monitor change in length (rapidly adapt) and group II fibers monitor static length, gamma motor neurons cause the intrafusal fibers to contract in concert with the muscle (alpha motor neuron)
-Golgi tendon organ: muscle tension, slowly adapting |
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|
Term
What are the 4 types of Tactile Receptors? |
|
Definition
-Merkel's: monitor light sustained touch (reading Braille)
-Meissner's: monitor light fluttering touch (feather)
-Pacinian: deep, vibrating touch
-Ruffini: deep sustained |
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|
Term
"Pain" receptors are called what? |
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Definition
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Term
Nociceptors have _____ nerve endings and ____ threshold. |
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Definition
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Term
Where are nociceptors located in the body? |
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Definition
-located throughout skin, subcutaneous tissue, including bones and joints |
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Term
Definition: Thermal nociceptors |
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Definition
-activated by extreme change in temperature |
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|
Term
Definition: Mechanical nociceptor |
|
Definition
-intense pressure activated |
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|
Term
Definition: Polymodal nociceptors |
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Definition
-mechanical thermal or chemical stimuli |
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|
Term
Definition: Thermoreceptors |
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Definition
-different receptors and channels respond to different temperatures |
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|
Term
What are the two types of nociceptive fibers? |
|
Definition
-fibers that carry signal from periphery
-A delta: thermal and mechanical
-C fibers: polymodal |
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|
Term
A delta are myelinated/unmyelinated and are 10X faster than C fibers which are smaller/larger and myelinated/unmyelinated. |
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Definition
-myelinated
-smaller and unmyelinated |
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|
Term
A delta receive ______,______ pain and C fibers receive ______,______ pain. |
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Definition
-sharp, fast
-dull, longer |
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Term
Where are the cell bodies of fibers of nociception located? |
|
Definition
-dorsal roots or trigeminal ganglia |
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Term
Primary afferents meet ________ (excitatory and inhibitory) and projection neurons in ______ horn. |
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Definition
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Term
Nociceptive naurons use ________ that elicits fast/slow potentials. C fibers especially release peptide neurotransmitter __________ (slow/faster) |
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Definition
-fast
-substance P
-slower |
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Term
True or False: Peptide neurotransmitters diffuse less and don't last as long. |
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Definition
FALSE; diffuse more and last longer |
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|
Term
Nociceptive signal travels to the thalamus in one of a couple of tracts including the _____________ tract. |
|
Definition
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|
Term
Outline the Aschending Pathways of Pain |
|
Definition
activation of free nerve endigs --> A delta (myelinated) and C (unmyelinated) fibers--> spinal cord to the dorsal horn--> synapse on 2nd order neurons most but not all cross in dorsal horn--> travel to thalamus as the spinothalamic tract in the dorsal gray columns, in animals it synapses along hte way--> in thalamus synapses and goes on to sensory cortex, also projections to the reticular activating system--> goes to the midbrain (includes the periaqueductal grey matter) |
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|
Term
Definition: Hyperalgesia
-how does this occur? |
|
Definition
-repeated stimulation results in an increased sensitivity (lower htreshold) for subsequent noxious stimulation
-local release of inflammatory chemical mediactors that lower the threshold of the nerve endings |
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|
Term
|
Definition
-occurs in dorsal horn as an immediate response to high levels of afferent activity (inc dorsal horn discharges with repeated low intensity stimulation)
-response to glutamate |
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|
Term
Definition: Allodynia
-how is this clinically relevant? |
|
Definition
-when a previously inncocuous stimulus to seem painful
-main reason for using preemptive analgesia |
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|
Term
Definition: Gating pain hypothesis |
|
Definition
nociceptive sensory input (mechanical/tactile input) such as Αβ fibers can reduce pain
(rubbing or shaking the boo boo makes it better) |
|
|
Term
What is another term for Descending Inhibitory Nociceptive Pathways |
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Definition
-stimulation produced analgesia |
|
|
Term
Outline the Descending Inhibitory Nociceptive Pathway |
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Definition
-Parequeductal gray matter (midbrain) sends descending neurons which modify inhibitory interneurons to affect ascending signals in dorsal horn (PAG-> medulla (nucleus raphe magnus)-> dorsal horn) |
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|
Term
What is the neurotransmitter of the Descending Inhibitory Nociceptive pathway? |
|
Definition
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|
Term
Pain synapses on first/second in the dorsal/ventral horn. These continue/cross in the _____ and go to the _____. Are the receptors free or encapsulated? |
|
Definition
-second
-dorsal
-cross
-spinal cord
-thalamus
-free receptors
-free receptors |
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|
Term
Mechanosensory project to dorsal/ventral horn and project to the ______, where they continue/cross and go to _______ on to ________ cortex. Are the receptors encapsulated? |
|
Definition
-dorsal
-medulla
-cross
-thalamus
-somatosensory cortex
-encapsulated receptors |
|
|
Term
What are the 3 types of acute pain? |
|
Definition
-Nociceptive: when you give a stimulus
-Neuropathic Pain: when you just have a pain neuron being turned on withoit actual stimulus
-Visceral Pain: same pain but starts from visceral organs (tracts same as cutaneous pain, can perceive visceral as cutaneous) |
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|
Term
Describe the vestbular system receptors |
|
Definition
-hair cells: sterovilli are bundled with a size gradient with a kinocilium |
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|
Term
In the vestibular system, hair cell stereovilli are bathed in _____, has high [__] and low [__] |
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Definition
-endolymph
-high K+
-low Na+ |
|
|
Term
In the vestibular system, on the basolateral side of the hair cell perilymph, high [__] and low [__] |
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Definition
|
|
Term
Where are the K+ channels located in the vestibular system? Describe the electrical gradient. |
|
Definition
-in steriovilli and basolateral mem
-40 mV across hari cell mem |
|
|
Term
How do hair cells of the vestibular system receive signals? What hapens then? |
|
Definition
-hairs bend, direction of bending determines if K channels open or close (depolarized or hyperpolarized)
-voltage gated Ca+ channels open, excitatory neurotransmitter released, glutamate or aspartate
-AP at afferent sensory neuron |
|
|
Term
Definition: Vestibular labyrinths |
|
Definition
-chambers housing otolithic organs, semicircular canals (cochlea=auditory) that contain hair cells in different planes
-filled with endolymph, hair cells in a gelatinous sybstance in otolithic mem |
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|
Term
Semicircular canals detect _________ and otoliths detect _____ and changes in __________ |
|
Definition
-rotation
-tilting
-changes in relationship to gravity |
|
|
Term
Outline the Vestibular Signaling Pathway |
|
Definition
hair cells=> vestibular n=> vestibular ganglia=> through the internal acoustic meatus=> joins with cochlear n=> synapses in ipsilateral brainstem at vestibular nuclei of the medulla |
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|
Term
Describe the UMN of the Vestibular Nucleus |
|
Definition
-UMN down spinal cord
-vestibulospinal tract ipsilateral
-excite and inhibit extensor and flexors in coordinated fashion |
|
|
Term
What are the 4 posible destinations of vestibular signals past hte vestibular nucleus? |
|
Definition
1) to motor nuclei of CN III, IV, and VI in brainstem: eye movement
2) To thalamus, then cortex: conscious awareness of balance
3) To emetic center: vomit
4) To cerebellum: for fine-tuning |
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|
Term
True or False: A lesion of the vestibular system can be peripheral or central and is better when blindfolded. |
|
Definition
FALSE, worse when blindfolded |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
-lateral eye movement when head is stationary |
|
|
Term
What are the clinical signs of a vestibular lesion? |
|
Definition
-head tilt, ventral ear towards lesion
-lean or fall towards lesion
-circling towards lesion
-asymmetric ataxia, no loss of strength
-postural reactions normal
-nystagmus
NO LOSS OF STRENGTH |
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