Sensory and Reproduc Word Scramble
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Question | Answer |
What do sensory receptors change senstory stimuli into | Nerve Signals |
What do the components of the brain interact to do? | Receive sensory input Integrate and Store info Transmit Motor Responses |
Sensation | Conscious or Unconscious awareness of external or Internal Stimuli |
Superficial Sensation | AKA Ecteroreceptive Sensation Includes Touch, Pain, Temperature from the surface of the body |
Deep Sensation | Includes muscle fascia, bone and joint pain, vibration, pressure and propicoeption |
General Senses | Touch, Pain, Itch, Tickle, Vibration and Pressure |
Special Senses | Vision, Smell, Taste hearing and equilibrium |
4 components to perceive a sensation | 1. Stimulation of the reception filed 2. Transduction of the stimulus 3. Impulse Generation and Conduction 4.Integration of Sensroy input |
Stimulation of the receptive field (1) | With approrpriate quality and strength will cause the sensory neuron to initiate a nerve impulse |
Transduction of the stimulius (2) | conversion |
Impulse Generation and Conduction (3) | From PNS - CNS |
1ST order neuron | conducts impulse from spmatoreceptros from brain to spinal cord |
2ND Order Neruon | Conducts impulse from somatosensoryreceptros to thalmus |
3RD order Neuron | Conducts impulse from thalamus to somatosenroy cortex, where conscious perception of sensation is located (3 synapses) |
Free Nerve Endings | found everywhere in the body |
Encapsulated Nerve Endingds | Found in non hairy parts of the skin |
Separate Cells | located in sense organs ex. eyes ears |
Exterorecetors | receptors to general and special sense , located on the surface of the body |
Interoreceptors | located in the blood |
Propireceptors | Located in muscles tendons joints stimulated by movement |
Thermoreceptors | Detect cahnge in temperature |
nocireceptors | detect chemical/physical damage to tissue |
pHOTORECEPTROS | DETECT light on retina |
Chemoreceptros | Detect taste in mouth |
Tactile Sensation | stimulation of receptors in skin tissues right beneath the skin |
Vibration | caused by rapid repetitive sensory signals |
Itch/Tickle | from receptors in superficial layer by release of bradykimin |
Messiners Corpuscles | encapsulated nerve endings that elicit large myelinated sensory nerve fibers |
Merkels Disk | Flattened dendrites of sensory neurons Allows you to determine continuous touch against skin |
Ruffini's End Organ | Deep layers of dermis/ fast adapting -determines heavy continuous touch and pressure |
Lamellated | -Stimulated by rapid tissue movement -Detects vibrations and other extreme changes |
Crude Touch | knowing something has touched the skin |
Fine TOuch | Ability to recgonize exact location, shape size and texture of stimulus |
What is the only sensation you can elicit on yourself | Tickle |
An itch sensation alerts attention to a _____ stimulus on the skin surface, which -elicts the ____ reflex to rid the irritant | 1. Mild 2. Scratch |
If the scratch reflex is strong what receptors are stimulated? | Pain |
Phantom Pain | Sensation of pain in an amoutated limb --> brain neurons are still active |
Mechanoreceptors | detect environment changes |
Pain | protective mechanism when tissues are being damaged |
Fast Pain | .1 second after stimulus (acute and sharp) |
Slow pain | 1. second after stimulus and increases over seconds. (throb, burning) |
Somatic Pain | Superficial: skin receptors Deep: Skeletal muscles and tendons |
Visceral Pain | comes from the internal organs. nociceptors send signals to the spinal cord and brain when damage is detected -- feels originated from skin |
Referred Pain | pain being felt in an area away from the actual source of the pain. |
Joint Kinesthetic Receptors | Respond to pressure around synovial joints, within the CT. Responds to excelleration and deceleration movements of joints |
Muscle Spindle Apparatus | Stimulated bu motor neurons to provide feedback on the degree of muscle stretching |
Golgi Tendon Organs | Protect tendons and muscles from damage by decreasing muscle tension |
Posterior Column medial lemomisus pathway to the cortex | impulses conducted along this pathway are concerned with fine touch, proprioception, and vibratory sensations |
Gracile Fasciculus and Cuneate Fasciculus | Ascending tracts from white matter |
Posterior Pathway to the cortex | 1st neuron -SC- medulla -2nd neurons- either gracile or cuneate fasiculi-either the gracile /cuneate nucleus -crossing over (decussating) in the medulla- medial lemniscus-Thalamus -- 3rd neurons-primary somatosensory cortex-perception of the sensation |
ANTERIOLATERAL | Mainly carry pain and temperature impulses |
Syphilis | Causes a progrssive degeneration of the posterior spinal cord |
Syphalis Organism | Treponema Pallidum Symptoms: uncoordinated gait, paralysis and insanity |
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christinarayyyy
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