Somatic Sensory System Sensation arising from skin muscle joints Allow you to survive in your environment and make appropriate motor responses.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Ascending tracts and general sensory neuro stuff 
Advertisements

Essam Eldin AbdelHady Salama
Copyright © 2007 Wolters Kluwer Health | Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Neuroscience: Exploring the Brain, 3e Chapter 12: The Somatic Sensory System.
Somatic Sensation of the Face and Head
No. 26 Sensory Pathways (1).
Long Sensory Pathways (Somatic Sensation) David A. Morton, Ph.D. Thursday January 31 st, Anterolateral System (Pain and Temperature Pathway) - DCML.
Chapter 13 - The Peripheral Nervous System and Reflex Activity $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100$100$100 $200 $300 $400 $500 Sensory Receptors Nerves and Ganglia.
Ascending Sensory Pathways
Senses Aristotle: classical “five senses”: Sight Hearing Taste Smell Touch This is not all: what did Aristotle leave out? There are other somatosensory.
Ascending Tracts Kassia Hitchcock and Katy Davidson.
Sensory and Motor Pathways
General Sensory Reception. The Sensory System What are the senses ? How sensory systems work Body sensors and homeostatic maintenance Sensing the external.
1 Sensory Pathways DR. ZAHOOR ALI SHAIKH. Before we talk about sensory pathways we will trace the course of sensory impulse from receptors to the spinal.
The Somatic Sensory System Chapter 12 Friday, November 7, 2003.
Sensory and Motor Pathways
Touch (discriminative sensation) Proprioception (joint position and movement senses) Pain.
1 Somatic Sensation ( MCB160 Lecture by Mu-ming Poo, Friday March 9, 2007) Introduction –Adrian’s work on sensory coding –Spinal cord and dorsal root ganglia.
Peripheral NS Links the brain to sensor receptors, skeletal muscles, and effector organs in the periphery Consists of two divisions –somatic nervous system.
Principles of Human Anatomy and Physiology, 11e1 Chapter 16 Sensory, Motor & Integrative Systems.
Somatic Sensation (The Bodily Senses)
Anatomical Substrates of Somatic Sensation
Chapter 12 The Somatic Sensory System. Introduction Somatic Sensation –Enables body to feel, ache, chill –Responsible for touch and pain –Somatic sensory.
CUTANEOUS SENSES Overview of Cutaneous Senses Receptors and Fibers Pathways Gate Control Theory Phantom Limbs.
Somatic Sensory Pathways
Chapter 10a Sensory Physiology.
Somatosensory System. The Integument (aka “Skin”) Giant, washable, stretchable, water-proof sensory organ…The boundary between you and not-you 6-10 pounds.
Touch Receptors and Axons Lecture 13 PSY391S John Yeomans.
PNS – Afferent Division Sensory Physiology Part I
Bear: Neuroscience: Exploring the Brain 3e
Topic 13 The Somatic Sensory System Lange Biology Neurobiology.
Somatic senses  There are 4 somatosensory modalities  Touch  Temperature  Nociception (pain and itch)  Proprioception.
Sensation: The conscious or subconscious awareness of external or internal stimuli. Perception: The conscious awareness and the interpretation of meaning.
Practical Neuroanatomy Lecture 4 Christine Hulette MD General Sensation and Review.
The sensory function of brain
LAB EXERCISE 18 GENERAL SENSES
The Autonomic Nervous System Assess Prof. Fawzia Al-Rouq Department of Physiology College of Medicine King Saud University Pathways of proprioception posterior.
Somatic Senses General Sensory System. Sensation Define Stimulus Type Sensory Organ Sensory Receptors Exteroceptors Interoceptors Proprioceptors Receptor.
The Peripheral Nervous System
12 October 2011 Chapter 7: Sensory Physiology Lab this week: Part 1: Visual System A (lecture/demo) Part 2: Sensory physiology experiments: A)Accuracy.
DR SYED SHAHID HABIB MBBS DSDM PGDCR FCPS Professor Dept. of Physiology College of Medicine & KKUH PHYSIOLOGY OF THE PROPRIOCEPTORS IN BALANCE & ITS PATHWAYS.
Somatosensation Lesson 17. Somatosensation n Sensory info from body n Cutaneous senses l exteroceptors l touch / pain n Kinesthesia l interoceptors l.
Sensation- conscious (perception) or subconscious awareness of changes in environment.
Central Nervous System Introduction The Sensory System.
Chapter 7: Sensory Physiology Chapter 9: Muscle Physiology
SENSORY (ASCENDING) SPINAL TRACTS
Ascending Tracts of the Spinal cord. Objectives Define the meaning of a tract. Distinguish between the different types of tracts. Locate the position.
Dr Abdulrahman Alhowikan Collage of medicine Physiology Dep. Pathways of Proprioception.
The Skin Example Skin Receptors: Free nerve ending; Pacinian corpuscles; Ruffini endings; Hair follicle ending; Meissner corpuscle; Merkel’s disk Light.
Proprioception and Discriminative Touch – Dorsal Column/Medial Lemniscus System.
مسیرهای انتقال حسهای پیکری
Somatic senses The somatic senses are the nervous mechanisms that collect sensory information from all over the body. These senses are in contradistinction.
Mapping the human somatosensory cortex – the sensory homunculus – perception of touch, temperature, pain, proprioception, kinesthetics, haptics, sexual.
Somatosensory Systems
The Autonomic Nervous System Assess Prof. Fawzia Al-Rouq Department of Physiology College of Medicine King Saud University Proprioception pathways posterior.
Lecture 5: Receptors Perception:
DISCRIMINATIVE TOUCH, VIBRATORY SENSE, AND CONSCIOUS MUSCLE JOINT SENSE (Dorsal column-medial leminiscus tract/system) Lufukuja G.
© 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. Peripheral Nervous System (PNS) Provides links from and to world outside body All neural structures outside brain –Sensory.
Ascending Sensory System
Sensory system.
Somatic Sensory System
Somatosensory Tracts and Maps NBIO 401 – Wednesday October 2, 2013.
Chapter 16 Sensory, Motor, and Integrative Systems.
ASCENDING PATHWAYS. Ascending Pathways Three-neuron pathways: Three-neuron pathways: Primary sensory neurons: From external receptors Travel through dorsal.
Int. Environ. Ext. environ. Sensory N.S.. Sensation. Reaction. Body func. Cont. Sensory N.S.. Sensory receptor. Afferent Nerve. CNS(sensory center)
SENSORY OR ASCENDING TRACTS
Sensory Function of the Nervous System
Mechanosensation Domina Petric, MD.
Somatosensation Mechanoreceptors that respond to touch/pressure on the surface of the body. Sensory nerve responds propotional to pressure 4 types of mechanoreceptors:
18 October 2010 This Week: Today’s Lecture: Sensory Part 2, then Muscle Lab: Vision Part 2 Cutaneous receptor experiments for Abstracts Review of statistical.
Sensory Pathways and the Somatic Nervous System
Presentation transcript:

Somatic Sensory System Sensation arising from skin muscle joints Allow you to survive in your environment and make appropriate motor responses

Somatic Sensation The ability to feel your physical environment, to ache, feel temperature, pain, to know where your body position is Pressure, position of joints/muscles, temperature, distension of bladder, stomach Over-stimulation of body can be damaging

Sensory Receptors Spread throughout body Senses 4 types of information aka sensory modality –Touch, pressure, vibration –Body position, propioceptive receptors –Temperature –Pain-Nociception

Encoded Information Intensity Duration Position Direction

Propioception Sensory Information regarding joint and limb position Allow you to know your body position without looking in the mirror Muscle spindles- intrafusal fibers and Golgi Tendon organs are specialized structures that are innervated by DRGNs and send information to the spinal cord

Touch Skin: largest sensory organ –Epidermis (outer layer) & dermis (inner layer) Sensitive to raised dot: 0.006mmH x 0.04mmW; braille dot is 167 times bigger Skin receptors –Hairy & glabrous (hairless)

12.1

Mechanoreceptors Found in skin for sensing contact with physical world Found in bladder, blood vessels, heart digestive organs and teeth to sense pressure Mechanoreceptors are innervated by myelinated axons Axons have mechanosensitive ion channels gated by stretch & tension changes

Pacinian corpuscle –Found in dermis Meissner corpuscle –Found in ridges of glabrous skin Merkel’s disc in epidermis Rufini endings –Found in hairy & glabrous skin Types of Mechanoreceptors Found in Skin

Primary Afferent Axon Axons of varying diameters with soma in DRG and enter Spinal cord through dorsal roots into dorsal horn Different diameter axons carry different types of somatosensory information Project locally in spinal cord and have long ascending branches to contact secondary somatosensory axons

Receptive Field Area of skin that is monitored by a single mechanoreceptor –Meissner & merkel have small RF (2-3mm) –Pacinian & ruffini have large RF (entire finger/ ½ palm)

F 12.2

Dermatomes The area of skin innervated by the right and left dorsal roots (1 st order neuron) of a single spinal segment When mapped, dermatomes form sets of bands representing surface of body innervated by axons in one level of sc.

Add F

2-point discrimination Ability to discern 2 closely position points as 2 rather than 1. Varies 20 fold throughout body Fingertips have highest resolution –Due to high density of mechanoreceptors –Receptor subtypes with small receptive fields –More cortical neurons dedicated to deciphering sensory information

F 12.6

First and Second Order Neurons Primary and secondary somatosensory or afferent neurons –The primary neuron has the sensory receptor –The secondary neurons gets information from the primary and can project information or modify locally activity of primary neurons.

Second order Neurons aka Interneurons Neurons that receive synaptic input form DRG neurons Reside in dorsal horn and trigger reflex responses Also ascend to brainstem and thalamus Also reside in brain stem and are involved in perception

Add 12.13

Dorsal Column-Medial Leminiscus Pathway Touch/vibration & position (proprioception) info travels to brain separate from pain/temperature Afferent/central axon of large sensory (AB) fibers ascend ipsilaterally in dorsal columns with tactile info and limb position info DC also have 2 nd order ascending axons from dorsal horn neurons

Dorsal column nuclei Axons terminate in DCN in medulla Then decussate (cross) and ascend as medial lemniscus tract through pons & midbrain to synapse in ventral posterior nucleus (VPN) of thalamus VPN axons then project to primary somatosensory neurons in parietal cortex (S1)

Somotopic Organization

Somotopy Mapping of body areas sensation onto the cortex Somotopic map called homunculus that shows that the largest number of neurons in S1 receive sensory information from hand and mouth

Somatosensory Cortex In Parietal lobe, posterior to central sulcus Carries on higher order processing of sensory information. Called S1 Receives synaptic input from VP nucleus of thalamus Respond to somatosensory info Lesions in S1 impair somatic sensation Electrically stimulate S1 and you “feel” a sensation on the appropriate body part

S1 Cortex Reciprocal (bidirectional) connections between cortical areas Association pathways Restriction of information: some cortex areas specialize in decoding texture, size & shape Thalamic input is to cortical layer IV which send axons to other layers in same area

S2 and Parietal Posterior Cortex S2 is lateral to S1 and is association area PPC is posterior to S1 and is involved in perception/recognition of sensation Neurons in S2 and PPC have complex receptive fields which can include sensory information as well as attention and visual and movement planning.

Posterior Parietal Cortex Injury causes neglect syndrome: Do not recognize body part as your own so you do not dress it, wash it. Agnosia: Inability to recognize objects including your own body parts. Astereoagnosia: inability to recognize something by touch, but recognized by sight

Trigeminal Touch Pathway Two trigeminal nerves CN5 Each divided into 3 PNs that innervate face, mouth and anterior 2/3 tongue & dura mater

Sensory CNs CN 7 facial, 9 glossopharyngeal, 10 vagus Large diameter axons carry tactile info from skin mechanoreceptors Synapse on ipsilateral trigeminal nucleus in pons Decussate and project to medial VP nucleus of thalamus Project to somatosensory cortex

Add