Terminology
Sensory Receptors and Organs
Spinal Nerves
Somatosensation
Sensory Spinal Tracts
100

The result of tissue damage or potential damage

What is Nociception

100

These receptors respond to stimulus the entire time it is present.

What is a tonic receptor

100

The exit of spinal nerves from the spinal cord

What is the intervertebral foramen

100

The connection between the brain and the body and are comprised of bundles of axons

What are spinal cord tracts
100

This spinal cord tract carries information regarding conscious awareness of the position of the body's upper and lower extremities

What is the Dorsal Column/Medial Lemniscus Tract

200

The relative position of the body in space without the use of vision

What is proprioception

200

This type of neuron carries information toward the CNS

What is afferent

200

Contains cell bodies of sensory nerves that are a part of the PNS


What is the dorsal root ganglion

200

Long axons that connect distant regions of the nervous system

What are projection neurons

200

This spinal cord tract carries conscious information regarding the feeling of acute pain and temperature

What is the Spinothalamic Tract

300

An area of the skin innervated by axons that enter the spinal cord through a single dorsal root

What is a dermatome

300

Respond to heating or cooling

What is a Thermoreceptor

300

Where the descending motor tracts exit the spinal cord

What is the Anterior horn

300

This pathway carries high-fidelity accurate details about stimulation and has somatotropic organization

What is conscious relay

300

The location of decussation for the Dorsal Column

What is the medulla

400

Allows us to investigate the world, move accurately, and avoid or minimize injuries

What is sensation

400

A sensory organ in muscles that responds to stretch

What is a muscle spindle

400

Innervates the ventral body wall and all parts of the limbs

What is the ventral rami

400

An example is feeling a feather go across your skin

What is light touch

400

An injury to this location of the spinothalamic tract results in ipsilateral sensory loss

What is the 1st order neuron

500

An area of the skin innervated by a single afferent neuron

What is Receptive Fields

500

Respond to tension in the tendon during a muscle contraction or when passively stretched

What is a golgi tendon organ

500

Innervates the skin and muscles of the back

What is the dorsal rami 

500

This pathway carries low-fidelity diffuse sensations that are no somatotropically organized

What are divergent pathways

500

A lesion to this spinal cord tract would lead to contralateral loss sensory loss of discriminative touch at the level of the 2nd order neuron.

What is the dorsal column tract

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