Anaphy Lec Special Senses
Anaphy Lec Special Senses
Anaphy Lec Special Senses
OVERVIEW OF SENSATIONS
→ SENSATION – conscious or subconscious
awareness of changes in external or internal
environment
2 types of senses:
1. General senses
- Somatic senses SENSORY RECEPTORS IN THE SKIN AND SUBCUTANEOUS
- Tactile sensations (touch, pressure, LAYER
vibration)
- Thermal sensations (warm and cold)
- Pain sensations & Proprioceptive sensations
(joint and muscle position movements) and
- Visceral senses (organs)
2. Special Senses – smell, taste, vision, hearing, and
balance
LJAR 1
:
OTHER SOMATIC SENSATIONS
→ THERMORECEPTORS → OLFACTORY PATHWAY
- free nerve endings that give two distinct - On each side of the nose, about 40 bundles
sensation: coldness and warmth of the slender, unmyelinated axons of
olfactory receptor cells extend through
→ PAIN OR NOCICEPTORS about 20 holes in cribriform plate of the
- free nerve endings located in nearly every body ethmoid bone.
tissue; provides pain sensation (fast pain/acute or
slow pain/chronic) → OLFACTORY (I) NERVES
- convey nerve impulses to the olfactory bulbs
→ PROPRIOCEPTIVE - from there, impulses to the olfactory tract to
- Allows us to know where head and limbs are the limbic system, hypothalamus, and
located and how they move cerebral cortex (temporal lobe)
- Kinesthesia – perception of body
movements DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THICK & THIN SKIN
LJAR 2
:
VISION VISION: STRUCTURE OF THE EYE BALL
→ EYEBROWS, EYELASHES, EYELIDS, EXTRINSIC EYE
MUSCLE (move the eyeballs), LACRIMAL APPARATUS
(which produces tears) – accessory structures
→ 3 layers of eyeball:
a. Fibrous tunic (sclera and cornea)
b. Vascular tunic (choroid, ciliary body, and iris)
c. Retina
RETINA:
a. Neural layer – photoreceptor layer, bipolar cell
layer, and ganglion cell layer
b. Pigmented layer – a sheet of melanin-containing
epithelial cells
LJAR 3
:
SUMMARY OF THE EYEBALL VISION: NORMAL & ABNORMAL REFRACTION IN EYEBALL
VISION
VISION
→ PHOTOPIGMENT (visual pigment) – substance that can
→ REFRACTION OF LIGHT RAYS by the cornea and lens,
absorb light and undergo a change in structure
which focus and inverted image on the central fovea of the
→ RHODOPSIN – photopigment in rods (usually
retina.
nonfunctional in daylight)
→ CONES – function in bright light and provide color vision
→ For viewing close objects, the lens increases its curvature
(accommodation), and the pupil constricts to prevent light
VISUAL PATHWAY
rays from entering eye through the periphery of the lens.
→ Nerve impulses arise in ganglion cells and conducts along
the optic (II) nerve, through the optic chiasm and optic
Improper refraction may result from:
tract to the thalamus. From the thalamus, impulses extend
→ MYOPIA – nearsightedness to the primary visual area in the occipital lobe of the
→ HYPEROPIA – farsightedness cerebral cortex.
→ ASTIGMATISM – irregular curvature of the cornea
or lens
LJAR 4
:
STRUCTURE OF THE EAR (6) The fluid pressure waves are transmitted from
the scala vestibuli to the scala tympani and
eventually to the membrane covering round
window.
(7) As the pressure waves deform the walls, this
creates pressure waves inside the cochlear
duct.
(8) The pressure waves bend the hairs of spiral
organ and stimulate the vestibulocochlear (VII)
nerve.
AUDITORY PATHWAY
→ SENSORY NEURONS in the cochlear branch of the
vestibulocochlear (VIII) nerve terminate in the medulla
oblongata. Auditory signals then pass to midbrain,
RIGHT INTERNAL EAR thalamus, and temporal lobes.
→ STATIC EQUILBRIUM is the orientation of the body
relative to the pull of gravity. The maculae of the utricle and
saccule are the sense organs of static equilibrium.
→ DYNAMIC EQUILIBRIUM is the maintenance of body
position in response to rotational acceleration and
deceleration.
→ Most VESTIBULAR BRANCH axons of the
vestibulocochlear (VIII) nerve enter the brain stem and
terminate in the medulla and pons; other axons extend to
the cerebellum.
LJAR 5
:
LOCATION AND STRUCTURE OF MEMBRANOUS SUMMARY OF SOMATIC & SPECIAL SENSES
SEMICIRCULAR DUCTS
LJAR 6