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Sense Organs Chapter 11

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Five major sense organs   Sight Hearing Taste Smell Touch  
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2 Pain senses   Fast Pain fibers Slow Pain Fibers  
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Fast pain fibers   Abundant in the skin and mucous membranes, these fibers produce a sharp, localized, stabbing-type pain at the time of injury. This is the type of pain you experience when you stub your toe or slam your finger in a door.  
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Slow pain fibers   These fibers are congregated on deep body organs and structures and produce a dull, aching pain. For example, pain sensations from a bowel obstruction or appendicitis would be carried along these fibers.  
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Referred pain   Pain originating in a deep organ may be sensed as if its originating from the body's surface- sometimes at a totally different part of the body. This occurs because sensory fibers from an organ and those from an area of skin coverge in a single pathway.  
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Analgesic   Drugs used to relieve pain  
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Gustation   The sense of taste, results when chemicals come in contact with taste buds. Most taste buds are located around protrusions on the tongue.  
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Glossal Papillae   Another name for Taste buds.  
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Vallate Papillae   Large papillae found at the rear of the tongue, although few in number, they contain up to half of all taste buds.  
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Foliate Papillae   Form ridges at the sides of the tongue  
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Filiform Papillae   Are thread-like papillae that contain no taste buds; they play a role in helping us distinguish the texture of food.  
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Fungiform Papillae   Are especially concentrated at the tip and sides of the tongue.  
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General Senses   Are spread throughout the body  
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Special Senses   Are localized by their respective sensory organ  
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How are gustatory impulses sent to the brain   a hair-like tip projects into an opening called the taste pore, which is bathed in saliva. Chemicals dissolved in saliva stimulate the gustatory cells, which in turn stimulate certain cranial nerves.  
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Smell   Olfactory  
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Ears   Provide the sense of hearing, they're also essential for balance (equilibrium)  
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The ear has three sections.   Outer ear, Middle ear, Inner Ear  
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Outer Ear   Consists of auricle (pinna) and the auditory canal. The visible part of the ear.  
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Auditory canal   leads through the temporal bone to the eardrum.  
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Middle Ear   Consists of 3 structures  
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Auditory Ossicles   The three smallest bones in the body connect to the ear drum to the inner ear; they are named for their shape. Malleus (hammer) Incus (anvil) Stapes (stirrup)  
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Middle Ear infections   Called Otitis Media commonly occur in children.  
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Inner Ear   Complicated system of passageways within the temporal bone contains the inner ear, which explains why this part of the ear is called Bony Labyrinth.  
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3 separate structures form the Bony Labyrinth   Semicircular canals, Vestibule, Cochlea.  
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Semicircular Canals:   These structures are crucial for the maintenance of equilibrium and balance.  
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Vestibule:   This structure, which marks the entrance to the labyrinths contains organs necessary for the sense of balance.  
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Cochlea:   This snail-like structure contains the structure for hearing  
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How does hearing occur   Sound waves enter the ear & travel down the external auditory canal. Vibration spreads through the malleus & incus and stapes. Movement of stapes against oval window shakes perilymph. Movement stimulates hairs of the corti sends nerves to cochlear nerve.  
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Hearing loss is divided into 2 main categories   Conductive hearing loss- fluid in the middle ear (being sick) will return to normal. Sometimes needs surgery to restore hearing.  
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Sensorineural nerve hearing loss   This type of hearing loss most often results from the death of hair cells in the organ corti, usually caused by loud noise. usually a permanent hearing loss  
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Balance   The vestibule and semicircular canals of the inner ear play a rold in the process of --  
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Inside the vestibule are 2 sense organs   Utricle and saccule- A patch of hair cells lies inside both these organs. The tips of the hair cells are covered by a gelatin-like material. Embedded throughout the gelatin material are heavy mineral crystals called otoliths.  
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Vision   Most complex of the senses.  
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Eyebrows   Perhaps the most significant role is to enhance facial expressions, aiding nonverbal communication. Also shields eye from sweat and from eye glare.  
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Eyelids (palpebrae)   Formed primarily by the orbicularis oculi muscle covered with skin, the upper and lower-- protect the eye from foreign bodies and block light  
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Palpebral Fissure   Opening between the lids.  
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Eyelashes   These hairs along the edge of the eyelids help keep debris out of the eye.  
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Conjunctiva   Transparent mucous membrane that lines the inner surface of the eyelid.  
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Tarsal Glands   Lie along the thickened area at the edge of the eye, secrete oil to slow the evaporation of tears and help form a barrier seal when the eyes are closed.  
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Lacrimal Gland   Small gland secretes tears that flow onto the surface of the conjunctiva.  
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Nasolacrimal duct   Passageway carries tears into the nasal cavity. which explains why crying causes a runny nose.  
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Ophthalmology   Study of the eye and treatment of its disease.  
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3 layers of eye tissue   A Fibrous outer layer A Vascular middle layer A neural inner layer  
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Fibrous outer layer contains   Scleara and Cornea  
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Vascular Middle Layer   Choroid, Ciliary body, and Iris  
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Neural Inner Layer   Retina, Optic nerve, and blood vessels  
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Sclera   Formed from dense connective tissue- the outermost layer of the eye. "White of the eye"  
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Cornea   Transparent extension of the sclera in the anterior part of the eye. It sits over the iris. (color portion of the eye)  
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Iris   Ring of colored muscle: it works to adjust the diameter of the pupil. (central opening of the iris)  
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Ciliary Body   Thickened extension f the choroid that forms a collar around the lense.  
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Choroid   Highly vascular layer of tissue that supplies oxygen and nutrients to the retina and sclera.  
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Retina   Thin layer of light- sensitive cells.  
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Optic Nerve   Exiting from the posterior portion of the eyeball is the -- which transmits signals to the brain.  
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Whats inside the retina   Photoreceptors- called rods and cones. that are stimulated by light rays to produce an electrical or chemical signal.  
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The space between the lens and the cornea   Anterior cavity  
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Clear watery fluid that fills the anterior cavity   Aquenous Humor  
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Lens   A transparent disc of tissue just behind the pupil, between the anterior and posterior cavities. Changes shape for near and far vision.  
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Posterior Cavity   Larger cavity lying posterior to the lens and anterior cavity. It is filled with a jelly-like substance. Keeps the eyes from collapsing.  
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Jelly-like substance found in the posterior cavity   Vitreous Humor  
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Ciliary Body   Secretes aqueous humor that fills the anterior cavity. The fluid flow from the posterior chamber, through the pupil, and into the anterior cavity. It then drains into a blood vessel called the Canal of Schlemm.  
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Pupil   The center of the cornea  
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Pupillary Contrictor   Muscle encircles the pupil. When stimulated by the parasympathetic nervous system, the muscle constricts, narrowing the pupil to admit less light.  
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Pupillary Dilator   Looks like the spokes of a wheel. When stimulated by the sympathetic nervous system, this muscle contracts, pulling the inside edge of the iris outward. This widens the pupil and admits more light.  
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Photopupillary Reflex   When pupils constrict automatically when exposed to bright light.  
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Rods   Located at the periphery of the retina, are active in dim light, are responsible for night vision, cannot distinguish colors from each other  
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Cones   Are concentrated in the center of the retina, are active in bright light, are primarily responsible for sharp vision, are responsible for color vision.  
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Glaucoma   Narrowed field of vision and colored halos around artificial lights. Can be treated with drugs or surgery any resulting vision loss is permanent.  
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Cataracts   Common cause of visual disturbances, especially among the elderly. Clouding of the lens, making vision cloudy or blurry. Part of age, other risk factors include diabetes mellitus, smoking, and prolonged exposure to light. Surgery is possible.  
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Color Blindness   Person sees colors but has difficulty distinguishing certain colors. Most common colors are red-green color deficit.  
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Common Visual defects   Emmetropia Myopia Hyperopia Astigmatism Presbyopia  
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Emmetropia   When light rays focus on the retina without the need of corrective lens, normal vision results.  
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Myopia (nearsightedness)   When light rays focus in front of the retina instead of directly on it, distant objects appear blurry while those up close are clear.  
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Hyperopia (farsightedness)   When light rays focus at a point behind the retina, objects up close appear blurry,  
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Astigmatism   Results when an uneven or asymmetrical curvature of the cornea, causing light to be focused unevenly.  
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Presbyopia   With age, the lens loses flexibility- interfering with its ability to change shape and the focusing muscles in the eye weaken usually begins between ages 40 and 50.  
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Cerumen   Earwax  
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Ceruminous Glands   Glands in the auditory canal that produce cerumen (earwax)  
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Equilibrium   Sense of hearing and Balance  
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Inner ear functions   Maintain balance  
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Key role in balance are   Vestibule and Semicircular canals  
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Inner ear is sometimes referred to simply as   Labyrinth  
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