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PowerPoint Presentation to accompany Hole’s Human Anatomy and Physiology, 9/e by Shier, Butler, and Lewis Chapter 12 Somatic and Special Senses Receptors • Chemoreceptors: sense change in chemicals • Nociceptors: stimulated by tissue damage • Thermoreceptors: sense temperature changes • Mechanoreceptors: sense mechanical forces including proprioceptors, baroreceptors, and stretch receptors • Photoreceptors: respond to light Sensory Impulses • Stimulation of sensory receptors cause local changes in membrane potentials (receptor potentials) • Sensory impulses are generated directly or indirectly to the CNS • Sensation: a feeling that occurs when the brain interprets sensory impulses • Projection pinpoints region of stimulation Sensory Adaptation • Continuous stimulation leads to the receptor becoming less responsive to the stimulus • Eventually receptors stop sending signal • Increasing the strength of stimulus will trigger impulses Touch and Pressure Senses • Sensory nerve fibers: free nerve endings in epithelium respond to touch and pressure • Meissner’s corpuscles: found in lips, palms, soles, nipples, fingertips, genitalia, respond to sensation of light touch Figure 12.1 Touch and Pressure Senses • Pacinian corpuscles: deep subcutaneous tissues, respond to heavy pressure and vibrations Figure 12.1 Temperature Senses • Two groups of free nerve endings located in the skin • Heat receptors respond to temperatures between 25 and 45 degrees C • Cold receptors respond between 10 and 20 degrees C • Outside of these ranges, pain receptors are stimulated Sense of Pain • Free nerve endings sense pain. • Pain receptors may respond to more than one stimulus or be sensitive to only one type of change. • Pain receptors adapt very little if at all. Visceral Pain • Internal organs have only pain receptors. • Referred pain is pain that feels like it comes from a different location than the site stimulated. • Referred pain may come from common nerve pathways. Figure 12.3 Figure 12.4 Pain Nerve Pathways • Acute pain fibers, A-delta fibers: thin, myelinated fibers that conduct impulses rapidly. These cause sharp pain • Chronic pain fibers, C-fibers, are thin, unmyelinated nerve fibers that conduct impulses more slowly. These cause dull, aching pain • Awareness of pain occurs at the thalamus Postsynaptic Potentials • Neuropeptides can block pain signals by inhibiting presynaptic nerve fibers. • Enkephalins suppress acute and chronic pain. • Serotonin stimulates enkephalin release. • Endorphins are morphine like substances released in response to extreme pain. Stretch Receptors • Muscle spindles are found in skeletal muscles where they join tendons. • The stretch reflex opposes muscle lengthening. Figure 12.5 Stretch Receptors • Golgi tendon organs are found in tendons where they attach to muscles. • They stimulate a reflex that opposes the stretch reflex. Figure 12.5 Sense of Smell • Olfactory receptors: chemoreceptors that work closely with sense of taste • Olfactory receptor cells are bipolar neurons surrounded by columnar epithelium • Odorant molecules enter as gases and dissolve. The molecules bind to receptors and depolarized Figure 12.6 them Figure 12.6 Olfactory Nerve Pathways • Olfactory receptor fibers synapse with neurons in the olfactory bulbs. • Impulses travel along the olfactory tracts to the limbic system. • Impulses are interpreted in olfactory cortex. • Olfactory receptor neurons are in direct contact with the environment and can be replaced if damaged. Sense of Taste • Taste buds are found on tongue papillae. • Taste buds contain taste cells, modified epithelial cells that act as receptors. • Taste buds are spherical with a taste pore. • Taste hairs, the sensitive parts of the cell, are microvilli that protrude from taste cells. • Dissolved chemicals bind to taste hairs. Figure 12.8