HAP: Exam 4
Umami & examples:
"savory" Ex. glutamates - meats, nuts, and beans
What do hair root plexus conduct? What triggers it?
- Conducts every hair follicle - Triggers with movement of hair
What can Pacinian corpuscle's detect? Encapsulated or Free?
- Deep pressure - Encapsulated
Filiform: About how many taste buds/papilla? What is the purpose of it?
- Does not contain any taste buds - Increase friction for tongue for food movement
Vallate: Forms what shape where? About how many taste buds/papilla?
- Forms a V-shape at the back of the tongue - 100-300 taste buds/papilla
Foliate: When do you have these? Shape? Where are they found?
- Have them as a chid only - Leafy shaped - Found on lateral margins
Where are Meisner corpuscles found? Are they encapsulated? What can they detect?
- Only on hairless skin - Yes, they are encapsulated - Can detect fine touch
Salty: Where does it penetrate? Mostly what chemical?
- Penetrates into cell of taste bud - Mostly Na
Warm receptors: - Responds to what? - And in comparison to cold receptors are there the same amount of receptors, more, or less?
- Responds to 32-48 degrees Celsius - Not as many
Fungiform: Where? About how many taste buds/papilla?
- Scattered all over tongue - 5 taste buds/papilla
Threshold: 1. Based on what? 2. Variable or non variable? 3. What does a generally low threshold mean?
1. Odorants 2. Quite variable 3. More danger
The five types of sensory receptors
1. mechanoreceptors 2. thermoreceptors 3. photoreceptors 4. chemoreceptors 5. nociceptors
Adaptation: 1.Desensitivity to what? 2. Initial stages are quite what? 3. Starts in as little as _______? 4. Full in how long?
1. odor over time 2. Quite rapid 3. 1 second 4. 1 minute
Pain: Referred:
A superficial part of the body where pain is perceived, even if it's occurring somewhere else
Sour: Acids or base?
Acid
Where are papilla found on the tongue?
All over the tongue, on top of taste buuds
Cornea
Anterior 1/6 of outer eye
Is the cornea vascular or avascular?
Avascular
Bitter: Acid or base?
Base
Which is the lowest threshold of tastants?
Bitter
Orbit
Bony sockets of eye
How does the cornea get nourished?
By other fluids
What can Ruffini corpuscles detect?
Can detect course touch and stretching of the skin
Mucus What does it capture and dissolve, and trigger?
Capture and dissolve odorants which bind to receptors and trigger action potentials then brain
Odorants
Chemical that nose can detect (1000s)
Which sensory receptor detects chemicals?
Chemoreceptors
Olfactory hairs What binds to it?
Cilia that odorants can bind to
Iris
Colored portion of eye-controlled by smooth muscles, adjusts amount of light entering eye
What are supporting cells made from?
Columnar epithelium
Color-blindness
Deficiency in one or more types of cone cells
Night-blindness Deficiency of what?
Deficiency of rod cells' trait
What is the sclera made of?
Dense CT
Chemoreceptors
Detect chemicals in mouth, nose, and body fluids
Cone Cells what does it detect?
Detect different ranges of visible light spectrum
Thermoreceptors
Detect heat and cold
Rod Cells What do they detect?
Detect subtle differences in light intensity
Mechanoreceptors:
Detects changes in touch, pressure, position, or acceleration
Pain receptors: What does it detect?
Detects intense heat, cold, mechanical, or chemical trauma
Photoreceptors:
Detects light
What do thermoreceptors detect?
Detects ranges of temperature
Does skin have the same or different receptors for cold and warm?
Different
Merkel disc Encapsulated or Free?
Encapsulated
Tactile Receptor: Free Has exposed what?
Exposed dendrites
What does the orbit contain?
Eye, extrinsic eye muscle, and large pad of fat
Anterior Chamber
Filled with aqueous humor
Are hair root plexus's free or encapsulated?
Free
What is the fancy name for taste?
Gastation
Tastants:
Groups of chemicals your taste buds can perceive
Which cells are the ones that gets stimulated when different classes of taste molecules bind or are absorbed by it?
Gustatory receptor cells
What do supporting cells protect?
Gustatory receptors
Ciliary Muscles
Hold lens in place with tiny ligaments
Do fast receptors gradually increase or decrease?
Increase
Tactile Receptor: Touch
Insulated receptors - pad of CT surrounding dendrites
Posterior Chamber
Large, hollowed out back of the eye
Do rod cells have a low or high threshold?
Low threshold
What does the lacrimal gland do for eye movement? (2)
Lubricates it for easier eye movement and washes away foreign material
Lens What is it made out of?
Made of a unique, very long CT
Vitreous Humor What does it maintain and what does it push something against?
Maintains eye shape and pushes retina against choroid
Which sensory receptor detects changes in touch, pressure, position, or acceleration?
Mechanoreceptors
Gustatory hairs:
Microvillus found on receptors
Astigmatism
Misshaped corneas, affects sharpness of vision
Sweet: __________ and __________ have receptors on taste bud
Mono- and disaccharides
Basal cells: What do they produce?
More supporting cells
What sensory receptor is known as the "pain receptor"?
Nociceptor
Which sensory receptor detect tissue damage?
Nociceptors
Which sensory receptor detects tissue damage
Nociceptors
What gland is known as the mucus secreting cell?
Olfactory gland
Where are Merkel discs found?
On very superficial skin
Taste pore:
Opening in taste bud
Which sensory receptor detects changes in solute concentration in surrounding fluid?
Osmoreceptors
Which sensory receptor detects energy of visible light?
Photoreceptors
Lactimal glands What does it produce?
Produces tears which nourish exterior cornea
Eyelids
Protects eye and spreads tears over eye
What do supporting cells provide for? And for what part of the body/face?
Provides support, insulation, and detoxification for nose
Cold receptors What does it respond to (degree)
Responds to 10-40 degree Celsius
What are the five tastants?
Salty, sweet, sour, bitter, and umami
Olfactory receptors
Sensory neurons that contain external axons and dendrites projecting into sinuses
What senses does taste work with?
Smell and touch
Basal cells
Stem cells that will become new olfactory receptors
Supporting cells:
Surround receptor cells
What is the chemical sense?
Taste
What bends light more than the lens?
The cornea
Papilla:
The elevations on the tongue where most taste buds are found
Receptors in the nose cover what two parts?
The inferior portion of cribiform and superior nasal concha
What gives the eye its shape and what protects the inside?
The sclera
What is the largest structure of the eye?
The sclera
Which sensory receptor detects heat or cold?
Thermoreceptors
Retina Covers what?
Thin membrane that covers majority of inside eye
What do thermoreceptors tell the hypothalamus?
To cause shivers or sweating
What are the two types of tactile receptors?
Touch and Free
What can Merkel discs detect?
Very fine touch and pressure
What is the posterior chamber filled with?
Vitreous humor
Forea
Where focal point of light should be
Optic disc
Where optic nerve merges with retina
Sclera
White part of eye
Hyperopia
farsightedness (seeing far away fine)
Myopia
nearsightedness (seeing fine up close)
Choroid Membrane between what two things?
thin membrane between sclera and retina
Conjuctiva What does it cover?
thin membrane that covers inside of eyelid and portions of sclera- prone to infection
About how many taste buds are on the surface of the tongue?
~ 10,000