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CH 10 Vision Location, size, shape, color, texture, movement, direction, speed Star– sun light Retina Uveal tract—choroid, capillary-rich bed and pigmented layer (melanincontaining cells), ciliary body, iris, muscle Sclera and cornea 3 layers -Sclera and cornea - uvea -Retina 3 chambers -Anterior -Posterior -Vitreous cavity Fluid in anterior and posterior chamber is replaced every 2 hr Glaucoma/ canals of schlemm Phagocytic cells in vitreous humor Floater – aging eye Catarcts ; UV seems to be cause sunglass Cornea-light refraction Out of focus in water Accomodation Zonular fiber-connective tissue Myopia and hyperopia Pupil size – regulates by sympatic and parasympatic nerve Cell body of photoR Cell body of amacrine and horizontal cell 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Photoreceptor Bipolar cells Ganglion cells Horizontal cells Amacrine cells Photoreceptorbipolar cellsganglion cell Outer plexiform layer; junction between photoR-bipolar or horizontal cell Photoreceptor; rod cells and cone cell Amacrine cell Transformed the Sustained response of bipolar cell to on-off signal to ganglion Transmit the signal of Photo R to ganglion cell Unusual arrangement of retinal layer replacement of photopigment Hyperpolarization in response to light Under dark, Ca2+ channel is opened In light, the channel is closed In dark, cGMP high, Ca2+, Na+ open In light, cGMP drop, Ca2+ close -40 mV -65 mV Retinal (an aldehyde of Vitamin A) + Opsin (differ by cone or rod cell) In rod cell rhodosin 11-cis isomer light all-trans retinal activation of transducinphosphodiesterasecGMP drop channel close Signaling amplication One rhodopsin 800 transducin (8%)6 cGMP/one transducin200 channel closed (2%) 1 mV decrease Light adaptation Light close Ca2+ channel low Ca in cell activation of quanylate cyclease cGMP increase channel open Restoring mechanism Arrestin ; block the transducin activation and breakdown activated rhodopsin Trans-retinal is diffused into cytosol and converted into cis-retinal Recruited into disk and form the inactive rhodopsin with opsin Rod cell; low spatial resolution, extremely sensitive to light Cone cell ; high spatial resolution, low light sensitivity Scotopic vision Mesopic vision Photopic vision Light blindness Macular degeneration Rod cells vs cone cell Photon =1: 100 Cone cell is not saturated by light, it can discern the noise Rapid recovering activity (200 ms; 4 times faster than rod cell) Rod cell rod bipolar cell amacrine cell (gap junction and synapse)cone bipolar cell ganglion (convergence) Cone cell cone bipolar cell ganglion cell Convergence of cone cell may reduce resolution 90 million rod cell 4.5 million cone cell Cone in fovea (1.2 mm) seems to be rod cell because of too high density Foveola– rod cell free region (0.3 mm) 6 o eccentric acuity decreased to 75% The reason for moving eye 3 kinds of cone cell Blue, green, red •Rod cell •Each cone cell is color blind Color blindness Red and green X-chromosome Trichromatic Blue Ch7 Dichromacy color blindness Anomalous trichromats Black and white Movie Each ganglion cell response to small circular patch (receptive field) Two classes of ganglion cell On and off center ganglion cells (Figure 10.14) Equal number of on and off center ganglion cells On center ganglion deficiency, we can recognize darker spot. However, brighter spot was not recognized On center Bipolar cell (metabotrophic R); grade potentialglutamateaction poteintial on on-center ganglion Off-center bipoloar cell AMPA (ionotrophic R) glutamate offcenter ganglion Figure 10. 15 Sign inverting Luminance contrast On center ganglion cell On-center ganglion activity is peaked when light/dark edge Light adaptation Relative brightness Horizontal cell-GABA CH 11. central visual pathways What kinds of information we obtain from vision; luminance, spectral difference, orientation, motion Ganglion cell axon optic disk (blind spot); no photoreceptor Intracranial pressure detection by optic disk Increasing brain pressure swelling optic disk Vein and artiol Optic chiasm; 60% of optic nerve fibers are crossed, whereas 40% fibers ongoing to thalamus and midbrain Optic tract; contains fibers from both eyes Optic nerveoptic chiasm1) hypothalamus circardian rhythms 2) PRETECTUM Edinger-westphal nucleus in midbrain (pupil reaction to light) 3) lateral geniculate nuceus optic radiationstriate cortex (Brodmann’s area): primary visual pathway 4) superior colliculus PRETECTUM; 동공반사 Lightretina optic nervepretectumedinger-westphal nucleusparasympatic fiber in cranial nerve pupillary muscle Light response is identical in both eyes Ganglion cells of Lateral genicular nucleus convey the acuity, color, motion Pretectum and hypothalamus light intensity Ganglion cells projected to hypothalamus and pretectum express melanopsin (light sensitive pigment, independently from rod and cone cell) Reason for how circardian rhythms can be regulated in dark Visual field Visual field deficits Anopsias; large area Scotomas; small area Carrying superior vision Macular sparing; damage in cortex, partial visual deficit The functional organization of the striate cortex Orient selective neurons Simple cell Complex cells Length or orientation Binocularity Each genuclulate neuron is monocular Ocular dominance columss stereopsis Far cells Near cells It is acquired ability If single eye is damaged or strabismus during infancy, the ability of biocular stereopsis is reduced. Magnocellular layer (M-Cell) larger receptive field, faster conduction; larger cell body and extensive dendrite Parvocellular layer (P-cell)color information, wavelength-dependent center ganglion Both ganglion cells received the information from cone cell M-layer damage movement cognition defect without color vision deficit Konioellular layer (K-cell) short wave length Functional organization of extrastriate visual areas Occipital, parietal, and temporal lobes TM (middle temporal area); recognize moving without color V4 color without moving MT damaged patient problem in pouring tea, dialogue (can not recognize mouse movement), terrific accident Cerebral achromatopsia CH 12 The auditory system Hearing loss Rapid response (faster 1000 times than vision) 1.Trauma extremely loud, explosion, gunfire 2.Infection of inner ear 3.Oto-toxic drug gentamycin etc 4.presbyacusis More rapid warning to novel stimulation Deafness vs blindness Sound 3D wave; waveform, phase, amplitude (dB loudness), frequency (cycle per second, Hz; pitch) Audible spectrum 20 Hz—20 kHz (infant can hear over than 20 kHz) In general, 15-17 Hz is upper limitation in adult •Small animals are sensitive to higher frequency (in Bat 20kHz—200kHz) •Dolphin, bat Sound wave external ear->middle ear (collect and amplifying) cochear (change airpressure to liquid wave) hair cell auditory nerve fiber Music; The art or science of combining vocal or instrumental sounds with a view toward beauty or coherence of form and express of emotion The external ear Pinnaconchaauditory meatus (30-100 fold amplifying 3kHz sound wave) tympanic membrane Human is sensitive 2-5 kHz sound Recognize sound source The middle ear; converting air pressure to liquid pulse In normal, 99.9 % of air-wave is reflected when water meet (liquid is high impendent material) However, sound wave in inner ear is amplified over than 200 fold than tympanic membrane Overcome this problem by two mechanisms 1.Oval window; small diameter (energy of large tympanic membrane is converged to small oval window) 2.Lever action by middle ear bones (ossicles; malleus, incus and stapes) Conductive hearing loss ; defect in sound transfer external hearing aid (Box C) How escape the interanl sound and protect from loud noise? Two small muscles, which can regulate tympanic membrane tension Tensor tympani; regulated by cranial nerve V Stapedius ; by cranial nerve VII They stiffen the ossicles and protect the inner ear Paralysis of VII cranial nerve hyperacusis Acoustic vibration can be transferred directly to inner ear through bone and tissues Hearing loss and cochlaer implants In general, monaural hearing loss peripheral damage Peripheral hearing loss 1) conductive hearing loss; damaged in external or middle ear; occlusion of canal, rupture of tympanic Memb, ossification of ossicle 2) sensorineural hearing lossl innner ear (cochlear hair cells or VIII nerve) genetic or environmental factors The inner ear Cochlear is key organ for hearing; it transforms sonical energy to neural impulses and amplifying It also acts as frequency analyzer 10 mm, coiled structure, if uncoiled 35 mm Two memb structures; tectorial memb. And basialr memb. Partitions; scala vestibuli, scala media and scala tympani; they can be mixed in end of tube and filled with perilymph SoundBasilar membrane vibration Stereocilia Mechanical energy electrical signal Hair cells- atomic resonse and tens/msec, flask-shape epithelial cell conatining 30-100 stereocilia and single kinocilium (kinocilium is disappeared after birth) Rapid adaptation to constant stimuli we can discriminate noise and signal Direct and mechanical gate tip links Arrangement of stereocilia High intensity sound shear off the hair bundle permanent hearing loss 30000 hair cells/15000/ear Recent research stem cell for hair cell Resting potential of hair cell (-45-60 mV) Gate open K+ influx Ca2+ channel open vesicle transport VIII nerve Endolymph; K+ rich and low Na+ (produced by blood) Difference between hair cell and endolymph; 125mV It can make possible to inwarding K+ ion despite of enough K+ in hair cell Endolymph” K-Rich, Na-poor, produced by stria vascularis Perilymph: Na-rich, K-poor Gap 125mV Two kinds of hair cells Inner hair cells; actual receptor (95% of auditory nerve) three rows of outer hair cells; efferent axon of superior olivary complex Nonliner vibration of basilar membrane Tinnitus cochlear produce sound Tuning and timing Figure 12. 11 Volley theory-sensitive about 3 kHz Labelled line Wave form Ascending auditory system parallel organization Enter brain stem and from 3 nuclei Cochlear nuclei Dorsal Posteroventral Anterioventral Superior Olive Nucleus of lateral leminiscus Inferior colliculus Monaural hearing loss Integrating information from two ear localization of sound source Two different mechanism Below 3 kHz time difference Interaural time difference; 700 msec ; we can detect 10 msec we can detect 1 degree difference Medial superior olive (MSO) binaural input; bipolor dendrites coincidence detectors ipsilatertal anteroventral cochear nucleuslateral dendrite/medial dendritecontralateral anteroventral nucleus Integrating information from two ear localization of sound source Two different mechanism Higher than 2 kHz; head is obstacle for sound wave propagation Single ear detect sound, far ear shadow Ipsilateral cochear nucleus activatng Lateral superior olive Contralaertal ear inhibitory input LSOmedial nucleus of the trapezoid body (MNTB) Sound travel auditory cortex A1; primary auditory cortex; superior temporal gyrus Ventral division; belt area (it is similar to V1 or S1) Table 1.1. Copyright © 2001 The Cranial Nerves and Their Primary Functions Sinauer Associates, Inc. Cranial nerve Name Sensory and/or motor Major function Location of cells whose axons form the nerve Clinical test of function I Olfactory nerve Sensory Sense of smell Nasal epithelium Test sense of smell with standard odor II Optic nerve Sensory Vision Retina Measure acuity and integrity of visual field III Oculomotor nerve Motor Eye movements; papillary constriction and accommodation; muscles of eyelid. Oculomotor nucleus in midbrain; EdingerWestphal nucleus in midbrain Test eye movements (patient can't look up, down, or medially if nerve involved); look for ptosis, pupillary dilation IV Trigeminal nerve Motor V Trochlear nerve Sensory and motor VI Abducens nerve Motor VII Facial nerve VIII Auditory/vestibu Sensory lar nerve Hearing;sense of balance IX Glossopharynge Sensory and motor al nerve Sensation from pharynx; taste Nucleus ambiguus; inferior from posterior tongue; carotid Test swallowing; pharyngeal gag reflex salivatory baroreceptors X Vague nerve Autonomic functions of gut; sensation from pharynx; muscles of vocal cords; swallowing Dorsal motor nucleus of vagus; vagal nerve ganglion XI Accessory nerve Motor Shoulder and neck muscles Spinal accessory nucleus; nucleus ambiguus; Test sternocleidomastoid and trapezius intermediolateral column of muscles spinal cord XII Hypoglossal nerve Motor Movements of tongue Hypoglossal nucleus of medulla Sensory and motor Sensory and motor Trochlear nucleus in Can't look downward when eye midbrain abducted Trigeminal motor nucleus Somatic sensation from face, Test sensation on face; palpate in pons; trigeminal sensory mouth, cornea; muscles of masseter muscles and temporal ganglion (the gasserian mastication muscle ganglion) Abducens nucleus in Eye movements Can't look laterally midbrain Controls the muscles of facial Facial motor nucleus; expression; taste from anterior superior salivatory nuclei in Test facial expression plus taste on tongue; lacrimal and salivary pons; trigeminal (gasserian)anterior tongue glands ganglion Eye movements Spiral ganglion; vestibular Test audition with tuning fork; (Scarpa's) ganglion vestibular function with caloric test Test above plus hoarseness Test deviation of tongue during protrusion (points to side of lesion)