Special Senses
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Transcript Special Senses
THE SPECIAL
SENSES
Victoria Frawert
Anatomy
THE SENSES
There are five general senses: Touch, sight, taste,
smell, and hearing. Equilibrium is considered a
special sense as well, found in the ear.
Chemical Senses (Taste & Smell)
Chemoreceptors – Receptors for taste & smell that only
respond to chemicals.
Excited by chemicals dissolved in saliva & airborn
chemicals dissolved in nasal membranes.
Taste buds: located in oral cavity; 10,000; most in
tongue papillae; each taste bud has 40-100 epithelial
cells made of 3 major types.
Supporting Cells: separate and insulate
Receptor Cells: deal with taste
Basal cells: like stem cells, they give rise to new cells
Taste Sensations
Sweet at tip of tongue
Salty & sour on the sides
Bitter in the back
Physiology of Taste
Activation
To be tasted, first must be dissolved in saliva, diffuse into the pore
and make contact with gustatory hairs which trigger
neurotransmitters to elicit action potentials in these fibers.
Adapt rapidly 3-5 seconds & completely in 1-5 minutes
Taste Transduction
Process in which stimulus energy is converted into a nerve impulse
due to influx of different ions
Gustatory Pathway
Taste is carried in two cranial nervers
Facial: anterior 2/3rds of tongue
Glossopharyngeal: posterior 1/3rd
Taste triggers reflexes in digestion such as increasing saliva & gastric
juice
Influence of other sensations on taste
Taste is 80% smell, when olfactory receptors are blocked food
becomes bland
Thermoreceptors, mechanoreceptors, nociceptors, temperature and
texture can enhance or detract
Olfactory & Sense of Smell
Structure
Detects chemicals in solution
Olfactory Epithelium:
Located on roof of nasal cavity
Contain olfactory receptor cells with columnar
supporting cells
Covered by mucous to trap airborn molecules
Physiology
In order to smell the substance must be in a gaseous state
Must be water soluble to dissolve in olfactory epithelium
Bind to protein receptors which open ion channels that send
action potentials to olfactory bulb
Pathway
Send impulses from bulb down tract
Thalmus Frontal Lobe or Hypothalmus to interpret and
elicit emotional responses to odor
Imablances include anosmias (without smells) from
head injuries; unicinate fits (olfactory hallucinations)
EYE & VISION
Accessory Structures
Eyebrows
Shade the eyes
Prevent perspiration into eye
Eyelids
Palpabrae protects eye
Levator palpebrae superioris raises eyelid
Eyelashes trigger blinking
Conjunctiva
Mucous membrane over eyelids and anterior surface of
eyeball (white part)
Vascular, when irritated eyes are blood shot
Lacrimal Apparatus
Eye muscles
Consist of gland and ducts that drain
excess secretions into nasal cavity
Secretes saline solution (tears)
Contains mucous, antibodies, and
lysosomes to clean eye & destroy
bacteria
Movement is controlled by 6 muscles
Four Rectus muscles: Superior, Inferior,
Lateral, Medial
Two Oblique muscles: Superior, Inferior
Nerve Innervation: abducens, trochlear,
oculomotor
Lens : Divides eye into anterior and
posterior segments
Transparent, flexible structure that can
change shape to allow focus of light on
retina
Avascular
Becomes less elastic through life causing
focus impairment
Cataract – cloudy lens due to thickening of
lens or diabetes
Structure of the Eyeball
Divided into 3 tunics
Fibrous – dense avascular tissue
Sclera: white part that protects, shapes, and provides
attachment for eye muscles
Cornea: buldges anteriorly and allows light into eye
Vascular
Choroid – highly vascular & provides nutrition
Ciliary Body – encircles lense and keeps it in place
Iris – contains pupil and changes in shape due to light
Sensory – contains the retina, which are photoreceptors of
rods & cones
Optic Disc (blind spot) – Where optic nerve exits eye
Rods – dim light
Cones – bright light and color
Filled with humors to maintain shape
Vitreous humor – in posterior
Aqueous humor – in anterior (if undrained causes
glaucoma)
Physiology
Wavelength & Color
Eyes respond to visible light spectrum
Progresses from red to violet
Refraction & lenses
Light travels in straight lines and blocked by
nontrasnparent objects
Light reflects or bounces off a surface
Reflection accounts for most of light reaching our eyes; as
light changes mediums it can bend or refract.
Focus
Your lens refracts the light to your focal point which
projects on your retina
Images are upside down & reversed
Myopia – nearsighted
Hyperopia – farsighted
Astigmatism – unequal curvature of lens leading to blur
Photoreception
Photoreceptors are modified neurons
Rods
Outer segment connected to inner, inner connects to cell body
which has synaptic endings.
Sensitive to low light, best at night
Cones
Require high light, provides color
EAR: HEARING & BALANCE
Structure – three areas: Outer, middle, & inner
ear
Outer Ear
Auricle or Pinna: ear composed of elastic cartilage & skin to
direct sound waves to external auditory canal
External auditory meatus: Short curved tube from auricle
to eardrum
Lined with skin, sebaceous glands, & ceruminous glands
(secrete earwax)
Tympanic membrane ( ear drum ) boundary between outer
& middle ear
Middle Ear (tympanic cavity)
Small air filled mucus lined cavity
Between eardrum & bony wall with two openings oval (vestibular) & round
(cochlear) window
Contains pharyngotympanic (auditory tube) running from middle ear to
nasopharynx & helps equalize pressure
Otitis Media – middle ear inflammation
Inner Ear
Behind eye socket & contains receptor information
2 Major divisions
Bony (osseous ) labyrinth
Vestibule – contains saccule and utricle which have equilibrium receptors that
respond to gravity & changes of head position
Cochlea – contains the organ of corti which is the sensory organ for hearing
Semicircular Canals – respond to movement of head
Membranous Labyrinth
Series of sacs and ducts containing endolymph fluid to help conduct sound
vibrations.
Sound & Mechanisms of Hearing
Sound – a disturbance of pressure
Frequency – measurement of offurrences of a repeated
event per unit of time
Distance between two crests is a wavelength
Frequency is expressed in hertz
Range for humans is 20-20,000 Hz
Amplitude or height of wave is related to intensity
Loudness is measured in decibles
We can hear from .1 dB to over 120 dB
Threshold for pain is 130 dB
Hearing loss occurs with exposure to 90 dB
Noisy restaurant is 70 dB, normal talking is 50 dB
A rock concert is 120 dB. You do the math.
Transmission
Sound waves move through the air, membranes, bones,
fluids to reach receptor cells in the organ of corti.
Vibrations excite hair cells which send messages to cochlear
nerve and brings the impulses to the brain for processing
Imbalances of Hearing
Deafness – any hearing loss
Conduction deafness
When something hampers sound conduction to fluids of
inner ear
Ruptures, perforated eardrum can cause problems
Sensorinerual
Damage to neural structures of cochlear hair cells
Can be partial or complete & generally there is gradual
loss of hearing throughout life
Cells can be damaged to extremely loud noises or
prolonged exposure
Can be fixed with cochlear implants
Tinnitus
Ringing of ear
Symptom of pathology and not disease
1st symptom of cochlear nerve degeneration
Can be from inflammation or medication or trauma
Meniere’s Syndrom
Affects semicircular & cochlear canals
Causes vertigo, nausea, vomitting
Standing erect is near impossible
Caused by excess fluid, rupture or infection
Mild cases can be cleared with anti motion drugs,
sometimes surgery
Equilibrium & Orientation
Responds to head movement without awareness
Receptors of inner ear are divided into two parts
Static
Sensory receptors for static are the maculae
Found in saccules and utricle
Monitor position of head in space, control posture
Dynamic
Receptor for dynamic are the crista ampullaris
Excited by head movement but major stimuli are rotatory
These areas are at work when twirling or feeling ill on a boat