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Chapter 13 Part A Peripheral Nervous System © Annie Leibovitz/Contact Press Images © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. PowerPoint® Lecture Slides prepared by Karen Dunbar Kareiva Ivy Tech Community College Why This Matters • Understanding the peripheral nervous system help you to recognize and treat nerve damage © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. The Peripheral Nervous System • PNS provides links from and to world outside our body • Consists of all neural structures outside brain and spinal cord that can be broken down into four parts: Part 1 – Sensory Receptors Part 2 – Transmission Lines: Nerves and Their Structure and Repair Part 3 – Motor Endings and Motor Activity Part 4 – Reflex Activity © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 13.1 Place of the PNS in the structural organization of the nervous system. Central nervous system (CNS) Peripheral nervous system (PNS) Sensory (afferent) division © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. Motor (efferent) division Somatic nervous system Autonomic nervous system (ANS) Sympathetic division Parasympathetic division Part 1 – Sensory Receptors and Sensation 13.1 Sensory Receptors • Sensory receptors: specialized to respond to changes in environment (stimuli) – Activation results in graded potentials that trigger nerve impulses • Awareness of stimulus (sensation) and interpretation of meaning of stimulus (perception) occur in brain • Three ways to classify receptors: by type of stimulus, body location, and structural complexity © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. Classification by Stimulus Type • Mechanoreceptors—respond to touch, pressure, vibration, and stretch • Thermoreceptors—sensitive to changes in temperature • Photoreceptors—respond to light energy (example: retina) • Chemoreceptors—respond to chemicals (examples: smell, taste, changes in blood chemistry) © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. Classification by Stimulus Type (cont.) • Nociceptors—sensitive to pain-causing stimuli (examples: extreme heat or cold, excessive pressure, inflammatory chemicals) © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. Classification by Location • Exteroceptors – Respond to stimuli arising outside body – Receptors in skin for touch, pressure, pain, and temperature – Most special sense organs © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. Classification by Location (cont.) • Interoceptors (visceroceptors) – Respond to stimuli arising in internal viscera and blood vessels – Sensitive to chemical changes, tissue stretch, and temperature changes – Sometimes cause discomfort but usually person is unaware of their workings © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. Classification by Location (cont.) • Proprioceptors – Respond to stretch in skeletal muscles, tendons, joints, ligaments, and connective tissue coverings of bones and muscles – Inform brain of one's movements © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. Classification by Receptor Structure • Majority of sensory receptors belong to one of two categories: – Simple receptors of the general senses • Modified dendritic endings of sensory neurons • Are found throughout body and monitor most types of general sensory information – Receptors for special senses • Vision, hearing, equilibrium, smell, and taste • All are housed in complex sense organs • Covered in Chapter 15 © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. Classification by Receptor Structure (cont.) • Simple receptors of the general senses – General senses include tactile sensations (touch, pressure, stretch, vibration), temperature, pain, and muscle sense • No “one-receptor-one-function” relationship – Receptors can respond to multiple stimuli – Receptors have either: • Nonencapsulated (free) nerve endings or • Encapsulated nerve endings © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. Classification by Receptor Structure (cont.) – Nonencapsulated (free) nerve endings • Abundant in epithelia and connective tissues • Most are nonmyelinated, small-diameter group C fibers; distal terminals have knoblike swellings • Respond mostly to temperature, pain, or light touch © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. Classification by Receptor Structure (cont.) – Nonencapsulated (free) nerve endings (cont.) • Thermoreceptors – Cold receptors are activated by temps from 10 to 40C – Located in superficial dermis – Heat receptors are activated from 32 to 48C located in in deeper dermis – Outside those temperature ranges, nociceptors are activated and interpreted as pain © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. Classification by Receptor Structure (cont.) – Nonencapsulated (free) nerve endings (cont.) • Nociceptors: pain receptors triggered by extreme temperature changes, pinch, or release of chemicals from damaged tissue – Vanilloid receptor: protein in nerve membrane is main player » Acts as ion channel that is opened by heat, low pH, chemicals (example: capsaicin in red peppers) » Itch receptors in dermis: can be triggered by chemicals such as histamine © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. Classification by Receptor Structure (cont.) – Nonencapsulated (free) nerve endings (cont.) • Tactile (Merkel) discs: function as light touch receptors – Located in deeper layers of epidermis • Hair follicle receptors: free nerve endings that wrap around hair follicles – Act as light touch receptors that detect bending of hairs » Example: Allows you to feel a mosquito landing on your skin © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. Table 13.1-1 General Sensory Receptors Classified by Structure and Function © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. Classification by Receptor Structure (cont.) – Encapsulated dendritic endings • Almost all are mechanoreceptors whose terminal endings are encased in connective tissue capsule • Vary greatly in shape and include: – Tactile (Meissner’s) corpuscles: small receptors involved in discriminative touch » Found just below skin, mostly in sensitive and hairless areas (fingertips) – Lamellar (Pacinian) corpuscles: large receptors respond to deep pressure and vibration when first applied (then turn off) » Located in deep dermis © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. Classification by Receptor Structure (cont.) – Bulbous corpuscles (Ruffini endings): respond to deep and continuous pressure » Located in dermis – Muscle spindles: spindle-shaped proprioceptors that respond to muscle stretch – Tendon organ: proprioceptors located in tendons that detect stretch – Joint kinesthetic receptors: proprioceptors that monitor joint position and motion © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. Table 13.1-2 General Sensory Receptors Classified by Structure and Function (continued) © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. 13.2 Sensory Processing • Survival depends upon: – Sensation: the awareness of changes in the internal and external environment – Perception: the conscious interpretation of those stimuli © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. General Organization of the Somatosensory System • Somatosensory system: part of sensory system serving body wall and limbs • Receives inputs from: – Exteroceptors, proprioceptors, and interoceptors • Input is relayed toward head, but processed along the way © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. General Organization of the Somatosensory System (cont.) • Levels of neural integration in sensory systems: 1. Receptor level: sensory receptors 2. Circuit level: processing in ascending pathways 3. Perceptual level: processing in cortical sensory areas © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 13.2 Three basic levels of neural integration in sensory systems. 3 Perceptual level (processing in cortical sensory centers) Motor cortex Somatosensory cortex Thalamus Reticular formation 2 Circuit level (processing in ascending pathways) Cerebellum Pons Medulla Spinal cord Free nerve endings (pain, cold, warmth) Muscle spindle 1 Receptor level (sensory reception and transmission to CNS) © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. Joint kinesthetic receptor General Organization of the Somatosensory System (cont.) • Processing at the receptor level – Generating a signal: For sensation to occur, the stimulus must excite a receptor, and the AP must reach CNS • Stimulus energy must match receptor specificity (touch receptors do not respond to light) • Stimulus must be applied within receptive field • Transduction must occur—energy of stimulus is converted into graded potential called generator potential (in general receptors) or receptor potential (in special sense receptors) • Graded potentials must reach threshold → AP © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. General Organization of the Somatosensory System (cont.) – Adaptation: Change in sensitivity in presence of constant stimulus • Receptor membranes become less responsive • Receptor potentials decline in frequency or stop • Phasic receptors: (fast-adapting) send signals at beginning or end of stimulus – Examples: receptors for pressure, touch, and smell • Tonic receptors: adapt slowly or not at all – Examples: nociceptors and most proprioceptors © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. General Organization of the Somatosensory System (cont.) • Processing at the circuit level – Pathways of three neurons conduct sensory impulses received from receptors upward to appropriate cortical regions – First-order sensory neurons • Conduct impulses from receptor level to spinal reflexes or second-order neurons in CNS – Second-order sensory neurons • Transmit impulses to third-order sensory neurons – Third-order sensory neurons • Conduct impulses from thalamus to the somatosensory cortex (perceptual level) © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. General Organization of the Somatosensory System (cont.) • Processing at the perceptual level – Interpretation of sensory input depends on specific location of target neurons in sensory cortex – Aspects of sensory perception: • Perceptual detection: ability to detect a stimulus (requires summation of impulses) • Magnitude estimation: intensity coded in frequency of impulses • Spatial discrimination: identifying site or pattern of stimulus (studied by two-point discrimination test) © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. General Organization of the Somatosensory System (cont.) • Processing at the perceptual level (cont.) – Feature abstraction: identification of more complex aspects and several stimulus properties – Quality discrimination: ability to identify submodalities of a sensation (e.g., sweet or sour tastes) – Pattern recognition: recognition of familiar or significant patterns in stimuli (e.g., melody in piece of music) © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. Perception of Pain • Warns of actual or impending tissue damage so protective action can be taken • Stimuli include extreme pressure and temperature, histamine, K+, ATP, acids, and bradykinin • Impulses travel on fibers that release neurotransmitters glutamate and substance P • Some pain impulses are blocked by inhibitory endogenous opioids (example: endorphins) © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. Perception of Pain (cont.) • Pain tolerance – All perceive pain at same stimulus intensity – Pain tolerance varies – “Sensitive to pain” means low pain tolerance, not low pain threshold – Genes help determine pain tolerance as well as response to pain medications • Research in use of genetics to determine best pain treatment is ongoing © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. Perception of Pain (cont.) • Visceral and referred pain – Visceral pain results from stimulation of visceral organ receptors • Felt as vague aching, gnawing, burning • Activated by tissue stretching, ischemia, chemicals, muscle spasms – Referred pain: pain from one body region perceived as coming from different region • Visceral and somatic pain fibers travel along same nerves, so brain assumes stimulus comes from common (somatic) region – Example: left arm pain during heart attack © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 13.3 Map of referred pain. Lungs and diaphragm Heart Gallbladder Appendix Liver Stomach Pancreas Small intestine Ovaries Colon Kidneys Urinary bladder Ureters © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. Clinical – Homeostatic Imbalance 13.1 • Long-lasting or intense pain, such as limb amputation, can lead to hyperalgesia (pain amplification), chronic pain, and phantom limb pain – NMDA receptors are activated by long-lasting or intense pain • Allow spinal cord to “learn” hyperalgesia • Early pain management critical to prevent • Phantom limb pain: pain felt in limb that has been amputated – Now use epidural anesthesia during surgery to reduce phantom pain © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. Part 2 – Transmission Lines: Nerves and Their Structure and Repair 13.3 Nerves and Associated Ganglia Structure and Classification • Nerve: cordlike organ of PNS • Bundle of myelinated and nonmyelinated peripheral axons enclosed by connective tissue • Two types of nerves: spinal or cranial, depending on where they originate © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. Structure and Classification (cont.) • Connective tissue coverings include: – Endoneurium: loose connective tissue that encloses axons and their myelin sheaths (Schwann cells) – Perineurium: coarse connective tissue that bundles fibers into fascicles – Epineurium: tough fibrous sheath around all fascicles to form the nerve © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 13.4a Structure of a nerve. Endoneurium Perineurium Nerve fibers Blood vessel Fascicle Epineurium © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 13.4b Structure of a nerve. Endoneurium Axon Myelin sheath Perineurium Epineurium Fascicle Blood vessels © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. Structure and Classification (cont.) • Most nerves are mixtures of afferent and efferent fibers and somatic and autonomic (visceral) fibers • Nerves are classified according to the direction they transmit impulses – Mixed nerves: contain both sensory and motor fibers • Impulses travel both to and from CNS – Sensory (afferent) nerves: impulses only toward CNS – Motor (efferent) nerves: impulses only away from CNS © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. Structure and Classification (cont.) • Pure sensory (afferent) or pure motor (efferent) nerves are rare; most nerves are mixed • Types of fibers in mixed nerves: – Somatic afferent (sensory from muscle to brain) – Somatic efferent (motor from brain to muscle) – Visceral afferent (sensory from organs to brain) – Visceral efferent (motor from brain to organs) © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. Structure and Classification (cont.) • Ganglia: contain neuron cell bodies associated with nerves in PNS – Ganglia associated with afferent nerve fibers contain cell bodies of sensory neurons • Dorsal root ganglia (sensory, somatic) (Chapter 12) – Ganglia associated with efferent nerve fibers contain autonomic motor neurons • Autonomic ganglia (motor, visceral) (Chapter 14) © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. Regeneration of Nerve Fibers • Mature neurons are amitotic, but if the soma (cell body) of the damaged nerve is intact, the peripheral axon may regenerate in PNS; does not occur in CNS © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. Regeneration of Nerve Fibers (cont.) • CNS axons – Most CNS fibers never regenerate – CNS oligodendrocytes bear growth-inhibiting proteins that prevent CNS fiber regeneration – Astrocytes at injury site form scar tissue – Treatment: neutralizing growth inhibitors, blocking receptors for inhibitory proteins, destroying scar tissue components © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. Regeneration of Nerve Fibers (cont.) • PNS axons – PNS axons can regenerate if damage is not severe 1. Axon fragments and myelin sheaths distal to injury degenerate (Wallerian degeneration); degeneration spreads down axon 2. Macrophages clean dead axon debris; Schwann cells are stimulated to divide 3. Axon filaments grow through regeneration tube 4. Axon regenerates, and new myelin sheath forms © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 13.5-1 Regeneration of a nerve fiber in a peripheral nerve. Endoneurium Schwann cells Droplets of myelin Fragmented axon Site of nerve damage © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. 1 The axon fragments. • The cut axon ends seal themselves off. • Axon transport is interrupted, causing the cut ends to swell. • Without access to the cell body, the axon (and its myelin sheath) begins to disintegrate distal to the injury. • Degeneration of the distal end of the cut axon, called Wallerian degeneration, spreads down the axon. Figure 13.5-2 Regeneration of a nerve fiber in a peripheral nerve. 2 Schwann cells and Schwann cell © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. Macrophage macrophages clean out the dead axon distal to the injury. • Surviving Schwann cells engulf the myelin fragments and secrete chemicals that recruit macrophages. • Macrophages help dispose of the debris and release chemicals that stimulate Schwann cells to divide. Figure 13.5-3 Regeneration of a nerve fiber in a peripheral nerve. Aligning Schwann cells form regeneration tube Fine axon sprouts or filaments © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. 3 Axon filaments grow through a regeneration tube. • Schwann cells release growth factors and express cell adhesion molecules (CAMs) that encourage axon growth. • Schwann cells line up along the tube of remaining endoneurium, forming a regeneration tube that guides the regenerating axon “sprouts” across the gap to their original contacts. Figure 13.5-4 Regeneration of a nerve fiber in a peripheral nerve. Schwann cell Single enlarging axon filament © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. New myelin sheath forming 4 The axon regenerates and a new myelin sheath forms. • The Schwann cells protect and support the regenerating axon and ultimately produce a new myelin sheath.