special senses and clinical neurolog aspect
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SPECIAL SENSES AND CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
ASPECT
Anwar Wardy W
SpS (K), DFM
FKK UMJ
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4 CLASSIFICATIONS OF CRANIAL NERVES
1. Sensory nerves: carry somatic sensory information:
touch, pressure, vibration, temperature, and pain
2. Special sensory nerves: carry sensations:
smell, sight, hearing, balance
3. Motor nerves: axons of somatic motor neurons
4. Mixed nerves: mixture of motor and sensory fibers
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THE SENSORY SYSTEM IS DIVIDED INTO 2 SECTIONS:
The somatic sensory system is the system responding to information from the skin, muscles and viscera (organs).
The special senses are taste, smell, vision and hearing.
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RECEPTORS Receptor
Specialized cell or multicellular structureCollects information about the
environmentSends information via afferent pathways to
spinal cord and brain. Cerebral cortex then processes
information.
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RECEPTORSTypes of receptors
ChemoreceptorsSense changes in chemical concentration.
Ex: smell and tastePain receptors (nociceptors)
Sense tissue damage from excess stress on tissue.
ThermoreceptorsSense temperature change
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RECEPTORS Types of receptors (cont)
Mechanoreceptors Sense changes that deform the receptor
Proprioceptors Sense change in tensions of muscles and
tendons. Baroreceptors
Sense changes in blood pressure in blood vessels.
Stretch receptors Sense changes in tissue length (found in lungs).
Photoreceptors Sense changes in light intensity.
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SENSORY IMPULSES
Stimulasi reseptor menyebabkan perubahan potensial membran yang menghasilkan aksi potensial dalam serabut sensorik.
Jadi semua reseptor pada dasarnya melakukan hal yang sama; ……..mereka menerima informasi tentang lingkungan dan perubahan menjadi informasi elektrokimia sehingga dapat diproses oleh sistem saraf
.
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SENSATIONKetika impuls sensorik diproses
oleh otak dan menghasilkan sensasi.
Otak menginterpretasikan sensasi yang berasal dari daerah impuls proyeksi.
So from the person’s perspective, the sensation is occurring in one area of the body, but the processing of the actual “feeling” of the sensation is occurring in the brain.
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SENSATION
When receptors are continually stimulated they become less responsive to the stimulus—sensory adaptation.
Example: hot and cold
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SPECIAL SENSESThis concludes the review of the somatic
sensory system. We will now investigate the special senses…
Smell
Taste
Hearing
Vision
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Feel
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SeNsE and PerCepTiOn
Lihat
Cium
Dengar
RasaRaba
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SPECIAL SENSESSmell
Sensed via olfactory receptors in olfactory organsChemoreceptorsSmell and taste work together75-80% of flavor comes from sense of smell.
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SPECIAL SENSESSmell (pathway)
Olfactory receptors stimulated by substance.
Nerve impulse travels via fibers running through cribriform plate of ethmoid bone.
Fibers synapse with neurons located in olfactory bulbs (crista galli of ethmoid bone).
Impulses are analyzed and travel along olfactory tracts to limbic system (smell may be linked to memory).
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SPECIAL SENSES
TasteTaste buds located on surface of
tongue (papillae) (also on roof of mouth, linings of cheeks and walls of pharynx.
Chemoreceptors (taste cells) pick up dissolved substances.
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SPECIAL SENSES
TasteThere are 4 primary taste
sensations. So all tastes are combinations of these 4 primary tastes.
1. Sweet2. Sour3. Salty 4. Bitter
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SPECIAL SENSES
Taste is carried by cranial nerves and is processed in the parietal lobe. Sensory impulses on anterior 2/3 of
tongue travel via CN VII. Posterior 1/3 of tongue = CN IXBase of tongue = CN XImpulses travel to medulla
oblongata—thalamus—parietal lobe.
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Smell
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SPECIAL SENSESHearing is processed by the ear.
The ear is divided into 3 main divisions:
External—middle—inner ear
We’ll first look at the external ear…
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HEARINGExternal Ear
Auricle (pinna) (outer portion you see) External auditory meatus (passes into temporal
bone) EAM lined with skin that contains ceruminous
glands that secrete cerumen (wax).
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Middle earTympanic membrane marks boundary
between external and middle ear. Has thin layer of skin on outside and mucous
membrane on inside. Proximal to tympanic membrane is the tympanic
cavity.
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TYMPANIC MEMBRANE
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Contains 3 small bones (auditory ossicles)Incus MalleusStapes
The stapes or “stirrup” is connected to the inner ear at the oval window. The oval window marks the start of the inner ear.
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Middle ear
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THE MIDDLE EAR Other structures of the middle ear include: Tensor tympani muscle Stapedius muscle Eustachian tube (auditory tube)
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Eustachian (auditory) tubeConnect middle ear to throat.Equalizes air pressure on both
sides of eardrum.
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EUSTACHIAN (auditory) tube
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CochleaFunctions in hearing
Semicircular canals (3)Equilibrium, balance
VestibuleBetween cochlea and semicircular canals
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INNER EAR
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VESTIBULEThe vestibule contains the utricle and
saccule which are both important structures in sensing equilibrium.
The cochlea senses hearing.
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Looks like a snail’s shell wound around a bony core (modiolus).
Upper and lower compartmentsUpper = scala vestibuliLower = scala tympani –extends to round window.
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COCHLEA
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AUDITORY PATHWAY
Spinal organ
Bipolar neuron of cochlear ganglion
Cochlear nerve
Cochlear nuclei
Trapezoid body
Lateral lemniscus
Medial geniculate body
Acoustic radiation
Transverse temporal gyrus
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HEARINGSound is transmitted through the air as waves.
The sound waves then enter the external auditory meatus and travel to typmpanic membrane (eardrum). The tympanic membrane moves in response to the sound waves.
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HEARINGIn the middle ear, sound travels from
tympanic membrane to malleus (connected to membrane) then to the incus and stapes. The stapes is connected to oval window. The stapes acts as piston to move fluid in inner ear.
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HEARINGThe ossicles also act as lever to
amplify sound (from tympanic membrane to oval window). Small muscles attach to ossicles called the tensor tympani and stapedius. These muscles are important in what is called the tympanic reflex.
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HEARINGThe tympanic Reflex is a protective
mechanism: Muscles contract with loud sound and
restrict movement of ossicles (and amplification of sound to inner ear).
Also muffles lower frequency sounds during speech (for better understanding)
Tensor tympani muscle maintains some tension on tympanic membrane for efficient transmission of sound.
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PERILYMPHInside the inner ear are chambers
filled with fluid. The scala vestibuli and scala
tympani are filled with a fluid called perilymph.
The cochlear duct is filled with a fluid of a different density called endolymph.
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THE ORGAN OF CORTI
The organ of corti contains 2 membranes called the tectorial and basilar membranes.
There are special sensory cells called hair cells between them.
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THE SOUND WAVES
The sound waves are transferred to the fluid filled chambers (scala) by the movement at the oval window caused by the movement of the ossicles.
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The vibrations in the fluid cause the tectorial membrane to move in relation to the basilar membrane.
The movement is picked up by the hair cells that relay an impulse to the nervous system via cranial nerve 8 (vestibulocochlear nerve).
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Some impulses cross to contralateral side of cortex. So damage to one side of temporal region does not cause complete hearing loss.
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FUNCTIONS OF THE EAR
Now that we have seen how sound is processed, let’s look at the other functions of the ear…
Static equilibrium
Dynamic equilibrium
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BALANCE AND EQUILIBRIUM
Static equilibrium is sensed in small organs located in vestibule called the utricle and saccule. Each contains an area called a macula.
Inside the utricle and saccule is a macula.
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BALANCE AND EQUILIBRIUMStatic equilibrium is sensed:
When head is upright hairs of macula in utricle project vertically and hairs in saccule project horizontally.
Hairs contact calcium carbonate crystals (otoliths).
Hairs bend in response to gravity changing position of otoliths. This causes impulses to be sent to central nervous system via vestibulocochlear nerve.
Brain responds by sending motor impulses to skeletal muscles to correct and maintain balance.
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BENIGN POSITIONAL VERTIGO.
Sometimes the otoliths can get out of position. This can cause a condition called benign positional vertigo.
The otoliths can be repositioned by a relatively easy maneuver.
The next slide contains a link to see this maneuver.
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DYNAMIC EQUILIBRIUM Dynamic equilibrium is sensed by the
semicircular canals. There are 3 semicircular canals because we
live in 3-dimensional space.
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FLUID MOVESWhen a person moves, fluid inside the
semicircular canals moves the cupula. The movement of the cupula bends the hair
cells. The hair cells then send impulses to the
vestibular portion of cranial nerve 8.
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Figure 14–20
THE OPTIC NERVES (II)
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OPTIC NERVES (II) Primary function:
special sensory (vision) Origin:
retina of eye Pathway:
optic canals of sphenoid Destination:
diencephalon via optic chiasm
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OPTIC NERVE STRUCTURES Optic chiasm:
where sensory fibers converge and cross to opposite side of brain
Optic tracts: reorganized axons leading to lateral geniculate nuclei
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EYE—NEURO CASE Conjunctiva
Mucous membrane lining inner surface of eyelids and folds back to cover surface of eyeball.
Lacrimal apparatusConsists of lacrimal gland and series of
ducts. Tears move from lacrimal gland –across eye
—superior and inferior canaliculi—lacrimal sac—nasolacrimal duct—nasal cavity.
Tears contain lysozyme (enzyme with antibacterial properties) to inhibit infections.
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VISUAL PATHWAY
Optic nerve
Optic chiasma
Optic radiation
Lateral geniculate body
Visual area
Optic tract
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EYE MUSCLES There are 6 different eye muscles that move the eye:Eye muscles
Superior rectusInferior rectusMedial rectusLateral rectusSuperior obliqueInferior oblique
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EYE MUSCLESDamage to any eye muscles causes double
vision. Eyes will normally track together to follow a moving object. This movement is called conjugate eye movement. If eye muscles or the cranial nerves controlling the eye muscle movements are damaged the eyes cannot track properly. This leads to double vision (diploplia).
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PUPILThe pupillary reflex occurs when
light enters the eye and pupil constricts. The reflex is carried by 2 cranial nerves:
Afferent pathway follows cranial nerve 2 (optic) frontal lobes
Efferent pathway—cranial nerve 3 (PS) light reaction
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PUPILLARY REFLEXES
Pretectal area
Accessory oculomotor nuclei
Occculomotor n.
Ciliary ganglia
Sphincter pupilCiliary muscle
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PUPILLARY REFLEXSo, if a light is shown into one eye and
the pupil on the same side constricts what cranial nerves are we testing?
CN II and III on same side (unilatareal) This is called the direct reflex.
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PUPILLARY REFLEXOr, if a light is shown into one eye and the
pupil constricts on the other side, what cranial nerves are we testing?
CN II on the same side of constriction and CN III on the opposite side.
This is called the consensual reflex.
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PUPILLARY REFLEXHow does the pupil constrict?
There is a small sphincter muscle around the pupil.
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PUPILSIf the sympathetic nervous system
is involved in producing the fight or flight response, would the pupil constrict or dilate when the SNS is active?
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Dilate—to let more light in (mydriasis)Opposite response for PNS stimulation.
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2 TYPES OF RECEPTORS
The light coming into the eye is sensed by receptors in the retina.
There are 2 types of receptors:
RodsCones
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VISUAL RECEPTORSRods
Hundreds of times more sensitive to light than cones
Provide vision in poor light. Produce colorless (black and white)
vision. Nerve fibers converge so impulses
produce more general outlines.Concentration of rods increases in
areas away from fovea centralis.
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That means that your peripheral vision is better in the dark than your direct vision.
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VISUAL RECEPTORSCones
Provide sharp imagesNerve fibers do not converge as
much so impulses produce more detailed images.
Concentration of cones greatest in fovea centralis.
Concentration of cones decreases in areas away from fovea centralis.
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VISUAL PIGMENTSRods contain rhodopsin (visual
purple)Light causes rhodopsin to change
shape and release opsin which acts as an enzyme in further reactions.
Net result is hyperpolarization directly proportional to intensity of light stimulus.
Rhodopsin replenished in dim light. In dim light, a rhodopsin-replenished
eye is said to be dark-adapted (can see in dark).
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VISUAL PIGMENTSCones contain iodopsins
A group of pigments sensitive to light waves of different frequencies.
If all are stimulated = white light
If none are stimulated = black
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VISUAL NERVE PATHWAYSOptic nerveOptic chiasma
Medial fibers cross overLateral fibers do not cross overSo medial ½ of right eye and lateral
½ of left eye = left optic tract. Fibers continue through thalamus
via optic radiations to visual cortex of occipital lobes.
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VISUAL FIELD This means that the visual field in one
eye is actually processed on both sides of the brain;
• Monoculer field defect ant. Optic chiasm.
• Bitemporal field defectoptic chiasm.• Homonymous field defectBehind OC• Congruous homonymous fdBehind
the lateral geniculate bodies.
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SISTEM SOMATO SENSORIK
Eksteroseptif : superfisial, raba, nyeri, suhu
Propioseptif : gerak, sikap, otot dan sendi, getar, tekan dalam
Viseral : lapar, enek Sensasi khusus:
melihat, mendengar
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Lesi di thalamus
Lesi traktus spino thalamikus
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GANGGUAN SENSIBILITAS PADA POLINEUROPATI
Bentuk sarung tangan dan kaos kaki
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POLA DERMATOM SISTEM SOMATO SENSORIK
Rostal = mulut Kaudal = anus Perhatikan :
Bahu C5 Tangan C6 – C8 Puting susu T4 Pusar T10
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DISTRIBUSI DERMATOM CAUDAL + KAKI
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DISTRIBUSI DERMATOM= Daerah kulit : dipersyarafi akar posterior dan ganglionnya.
Muka Belakang