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SOMATIC SENSORY SYSTEM Modalities What makes one different from another? Receptors Differ in their adequate stimulus (i.e., type of stimulus energy to which receptor is specialized to respond) Central pathways Place coding: different modalities are processed in separate places by brain. Which of these is primary basis of different sensory experiences? Müller: connections (not receptor sensitivity) is primary Demonstration: if press eyeball, see flash Implication: LABELED LINES (a specific pathway carries information about a single modality; activity in the pathway interpreted by brain as arising from that modality) Relation to somatic sensory Submodalities exist (separate, non-confused sensory qualities) Tactile (touch) Position (kinesthesis; proprioception) Thermal (hot/cold) Pain (fast, slow) Question: do separate labeled lines underlie these submodalities? Answer: apparently so. There is evidence for this even at periphery. Peripheral elements Fiber classes (table on blackboard) CLASS I CLASS A DIAMETER Large MYELIN +++ II A Medium ++ III A Small + IV C Very small - Tiny - Ventral Root MODALITY Position (?) RECEPTOR Spindle primary, Golgi tendon organs Fine tactile, Cutaneous mechanoposition (?) receptors, spindle secondaries Fast pain, Free nerve endings temperature, (noci-, thermo-, and crude tactile mechanoreceptors) Slow pain, Free nerve endings temperature, (noci-, thermo-, and crude tactile mechanoreceptors) Visceral? ? Functional associations Origin of evidence: selective inactivation of specific fiber classes Anoxia and pressure block thick fibers first Local anesthetics block thin fibers first Correlate with perceptual losses Itemize functions of each fiber class Receptor types Many varieties Morphology Endings that are encapsulated or linked to specialized structure Free nerve endings (all over body, including viscera) Physiology (adequate stimulus) How well-correlated with fiber or function? Muscle-related receptors: pretty good correlation Spindles Primaries Ia Secondaries II Functional distinction: encode dynamic vs. static stretch Golgi tendon organs Ib Also: joint receptors Function: proprioception Spindles are primary source of position information (note that this requires that brain also know gamma output; "corollary discharge"- brain keeps a "copy" of gamma efferent signal) But joint, cutaneous also contribute to position sense Cutaneous receptors Varieties Morphology Encapsulated Pacinian corpuscle Meissner's Ruffini Free nerve endings Hair base No specialization Link of morphology to function or fiber type? Crudely yes Class II always associated with encapsulated mechanoreceptors Class III and IV always terminate as free endings But breaks down in detail Encapsulated endings exhibit varied morphology but all are mechanoreceptors (though may be distinguishable from one another on basis of speed of adaptation) Free endings all look the same, but may differ radically in functional properties (mechano-, noci-, or thermo-receptors). Central Paths If there is some evidence for labeled lines in the periphery, can these be traced separately into the CNS? Yes, though fortunately not one path per submodality DORSAL COLUMN vs. ANTEROLATERAL (or spinothalamic) SYSTEMS Get name from spinal location of ascending tract Simplistic summary of distinction between two systems: Fine cutaneous and proprio (EPICRITIC) via dorsal column Pain and temperature (PROTOPATHIC) via anterolateral DORSAL COLUMN SYSTEM Review Neurons: 1) Dorsal root ganglion 2) Medulla 3) Thalamus Overview of pathway CROSSED path to cortex Implication: contralateral representation (as for corticospinal) Decussation: importance of location, e.g. in localizing lesions Primary fibers Fiber classes: I and II Division of roots: medial branch Local connections: e.g., Ia's and monosynaptic reflex Locating pathway in cross-sections Dorsal column (show) Dorsal column nuclei (show) Medial Lemniscus Formation at decussation of output fibers of dorsal column nuclei (lower medulla) Upper medulla; Medial Lemniscus abuts midline At pons, it is horizontal, lies above pontine gray At midbrain, lies ventrolateral VPL of thalamus Topographic order Accretion of fibers onto lateral side of dorsal column as ascend cord (hence lower body represented medially, upper body laterally within dorsal funiculus) Cuneate and gracile fasciculus and nuclei Topography maintained in thalamus and cortex (homunculus) TRIGEMINAL component supplies face component of same system Cell bodies - trigeminal ganglion (Dorsal-root-ganglion equivalent) PRINCIPAL SENSORY NUCLEUS of V (Dorsal-column-nucleus equivalent) Decussation VP-M of thalamus Projects to face area of primary somatic sensory cortex SUMMARY: Fine touch and position means Dorsal Column plus Principal Trigeminal Nuclei ANTEROLATERAL SYSTEM Information Pain / Temperature (PROTOPATHIC) But also crude touch and position Same as SPINOTHALAMIC We will ignore anterior vs. lateral spinothalamic distinction Summary: CROSSED path to cortex (and brainstem) Neurons First order: Dorsal root ganglia Second order: dorsal horn Third (or higher) order: thalamus Details Primary fibers = Class III and IV Lateral division of roots (fine fibers) Lissauer's (topographic "smearing" because primary sensory axons may course up or down a few segments before synapsing in cord) Synapse (sub. gelatinosa, marginal nucleus; also Rexed IV) May be multiple synaptic links in dorsal horn before ascent DECUSSATION of ascending fibers (second or higher-order neuron) As in Dorsal Column System, happens at same level of neuraxis as the first synapse But occurs in cord (ventral white commissure) Anterolateral funiculus Brainstem location of spinothalamic tract Thalamus Input not always directly from spinal cord Target includes VPL (but others too) Cortex TRIGEMINAL COMPONENT Spinal V (sub. gelatinosa equivalent) Spinal tract of V (contains primary sensory axons from trigeminal nerve descending from nerve entrance in pons to synapse in spinal V nucleus) Decussation VPm (also Posterior and Intralaminar thalamic nuclei) Face area PAIN PATHWAYS Why more detail here? Clinically important Unusual features Pain vs. Nociception Nociception = physiological (sensory cell response to tissue damage) Pain = psychological (experience generally associated with such stimuli) A-delta vs. C fiber contribution A-delta Fast pain High threshold mechano- and thermo-receptors C-fibers Slow pain Chemoreceptors Perfusion expt Collect perfusate from damaged skin Inject pain Bradykinin (released by tissue damage) C-fibers as effectors Flare in triple response Depends on "sensory" endings Axon reflex explanation Stimulate distal stump of cut dorsal root pain (mechanism requires dermatomal overlap) Components within spinothalamic (anterolateral) Review main pathway Components Neo-spinothalamic tract Direct inputs to VPL Spinal origin: Marginal Inputs: A-delta, C Response: high thresh nociceptors Role: Fast, localized pain Paleo- spinothalamic Inputs to intralaminar Spinal origin: Proprius Inputs: A-beta via interneurons in addition to A-delta/C Response: wide dynamic range (respond to non-noxious as well as noxious stim) Role: Slow, agonizing pain Archi- spinothalamic tract Almost identical to Paleo Target: RETICULAR FORMATION What is reticular formation Core of whole brainstem minus nuclei/tracts Mishmash cells/fibers Diverse roles (pain, motor, state changes [sleep, arousal]) Not a functional unit Reticular intralaminar TRACT TARGET Neospinothalamic Paleospinothalamic Archispinothalamic VPL Intralaminar nuclei Reticular formation Intralaminar SPINAL CORD ORIGIN Marginal nucleus Nucleus proprius Nucleus proprius INPUT A,C RESPONSE High threshold nociceptors A,C and Wide dynamic indirect A range A,C and Wide dynamic indirect A range FUNCTION Fast, localized pain Slow, diffuse pain Slow, diffuse pain Central Control of Pain Pain is different from nociceptive input Denervation (transection of nociceptive pathways) Often only temporary effect, may be followed by "Central Pain" (unbearable, indescribable) WHY? Diffuseness of pathways? Lissauer's tract (intersegmental smearing) Some bilaterality of A-L system Reticular formation (diffuse topography) Intralaminar output to cortex (widespread) Central control mechanisms Counterirritation Phenomenon (peripheral) Bash shin rub it Implies Class I/II fibers "inhibit" III/IV fibers Gate control theory Wrong but Dorsal horn is a gate as the theory proposed Psychological factors Trauma Battlefield anecdotes 40% of trauma patients report no pain Power of Suggestion Hypnosis Placebo Periaqueductal grey (PAG) / Raphe system Brain input to dorsal horn gate Circuit responsible Appearance of PAG and raphe in sections Modality specificity (pain only) Clinical utility Opiate relationship Systemic opiates act on cord same way Receptors and microinfusion Blockers of opiate or 5-HT block stimulation and Placebo effects Cut dorsolateral funiculus or raphe lose opiate or stim effects Labeled Lines revisited: are DC system and AL system lines for different submodalities? Mixing problem DC and AL each heterogeneous DC and AL converge at thalamus Answer: mixing of information more apparent than real Single neurons usually unimodal Clustering; for example... Dorsal column nuclei (light touch vs. muscle stretch) Cortex Columns (hair, joint, pressure) Areas (S-I has multiple representations, also S-II) Area 3a - muscle stretch Area 3b - slowly adapting cutaneous Area 2 - deep pressure So labeled lines are there, just finer grained Integration of Submodalities (parietal cortex) STEREOGNOSIS Hand in pocket: keys or scorpion? Requires integration Parietal association (areas 5,7) (one place it happens) Inputs Widespread somatic Other sensory modalities Damage Astereognosis This is an example of an "agnosia" (a higher order perceptual deficit in the absence of any obvious primary sensory deficit) Also: disturbances in complex somatic sensory functions, "body image" Extinction to double simultaneous Neglect Dressing Denial of deficit Not just somatic Neglect of other modalities, even in mental images Cognitive Spatial coding (have looked at what, but how about where?) Topographic order critical But not simple point-to-point Distorted homunculus Relation to two-point discrimination Other factors at play Innervation density Receptive field size Covariation of all three