Special Senses I: Olfaction and Gustation - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 77
About This Presentation
Title:

Special Senses I: Olfaction and Gustation

Description:

Special Senses I: Olfaction and Gustation – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:313
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 78
Provided by: marjor5
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Special Senses I: Olfaction and Gustation


1
Special Senses IOlfaction and Gustation
2
(No Transcript)
3
5 Special Senses
  • Olfaction smelling
  • Gustation tasting
  • Vision
  • Hearing
  • Equilibrium
  • All special sensory receptors are housed in
    complex sensory organs or specialized epithelial
    structures
  • Special sensory information travels via cranial
    nerves

4
Olfaction
5
Olfactory Epithelium
  • Covers the superior nasal concha
  • Pseudostratified columnar epithelium containing
    millions of bipolar olfactory receptor cells

6
Olfactory Epithelium
  • Contains 3 cell types
  • 1) Olfactory receptor cells bipolar neurons
    with dendrite projecting to surface, and axon
    projecting through hole in cribriform plate to
    synapse in olfactory bulb
  • 2) Supporting cells columnar epithelial cells
    of nasal mucosa
  • 3) Basal cells stem cells that lie at base of
    epithelium and continually replace olfactory
    receptor cells (which live for only one month)
    Neuron replacement!
  • Olfactory glands produce mucus to keep surface
    moist

7
Olfactory Receptor Cells
  • At epithelial surface, olfactory receptor cells
    have olfactory hairs projecting from the dendrite
    into the mucus. Chemoreceptors
  • The olfactory hairs are nonmotile cilia that
    contain odorant binding protein receptors
  • When an odorant molecule binds to the receptor, a
    generator potential (graded potential) is
    produced in the receptor cell
  • 1,000 different smell receptor types.
  • Each receptor binds to a variety of odor
    molecules that share a common structural part, so
    each odor molecule may bind to several different
    receptors, one for each part.

8
Olfactory Pathways
  • Olfactory receptor cells synapse onto the
    clustered dendrites of mitral cells in the
    olfactory bulb, lying over the cribriform plate.
    Cluster glomerulus
  • All receptors of same type send their axons to
    the same glomerulus
  • Each odor will activate several mitral cell
    glomeruli signature
  • Mitral cells send axons through olfactory tract
    to limbic (emotional centers) and temporal
    regions of cortex (consciousness of smell)

9
Olfaction
  • Normally can recognize about 10,000 odors
  • Very low threshold ( can smell even a few
    molecules), but adapts rapidly
  • Anosmia absence of sense of smell. Caused by
    trauma to nerves, excessive mucus, blockage by
    polyps, zinc deficiency or use of zinc nasal
    sprays

10
Gustation
11
Taste Buds
  • nearly 10,000 taste buds mainly on tongue, but
    also on soft palate, pharynx and epiglottis
  • number declines with age (why children like bland
    food)
  • Found on specialized epithelial structures on
    tongue - elevations called papillae

12
Anatomy of Papillae
  • Three types of papillae contain taste buds
  • Circumvallate 12, in V shape, each
    contain100-300 taste buds
  • fungiform scattered over entire surface of
    tongue 5 taste buds each
  • foliate lateral margins of tongue most taste
    buds degenerate in early childhood
  • (filiform papillae have no taste buds)

13
Anatomy of Taste Buds
  • Specialized epithelial strucuture within
    stratified squamous epithelium of papilla
  • Contains gustatory receptor cells, surrounded by
    supporting cells. Basal cells can regenerate old
    receptor cells (live 10 days)
  • Gustatory hairs project from gustatory receptor
    cells, through the taste pore, to sample the
    external surface

14
Physiology of Gustation
  • chemicals that stimulate gustatory receptor cells
    are known as tastants
  • dissolved in saliva, they make contact with
    receptors on gustatory hairs
  • receptor potential arises differently for
    different tastants tastants may enter cell
    directly (Na , H) or bind to receptor
  • Encoding of distinct tastes is still unclear,
    since individual gustatory receptor cells respond
    to many tastes

15
Taste Pathways
  • Gustatory receptor cells synapse with dendrites
    of 1st-order neurons that project via cranial
    nerves VII, IX and X into brainstem
  • From brainstem, 2nd-order neurons project to
    thalamus.
  • 3rd-order neurons project to primary gustatory
    area in parietal lobe of cerebral cortex.

16
Gustation
  • five primary tastes bitter, sour, salty, sweet,
    umami (meaty or savory MSG)
  • Other flavors are combinations of tastes, plus
    odors
  • Thresholds are lowest for bitter tastes least
    for salty and sweet
  • Specialized areas for reception of different
    tastes is partially, but not wholly true
  • Rapidly adapting

17
(No Transcript)
18
Special Senses II Vision
19
Accessory Structures of the Eye
  • palpebrae upper and lower eyelids
  • palpebral fissure opening between lids
  • lateral medial commissures corners
  • lacrimal caruncle red bump in medial corner
    contains sebaceous and sudoriferous glands

20
Eyelids
  • Orbicularis oculi and levator palpebrae muscle
  • Tarsal plates with Meibomian glands (sebaceous)
  • Conjunctiva mucous membrane covering inner lids
    and sclera (white of the eye), but not cornea.
    Pinkeye conjunctivitis. Contains blood vessels
    (bloodshot eyes)

21
Lacrimal Apparatus
  • lacrimal glands produce tears, secreted via
    lacrimal ducts onto conjunctiva of the upper lid
  • Tears wash over surface and drain through
    nasolacrimal duct into nasal cavity
  • lacrimal fluid (tears) watery solution
    containing salts, mucus, and lysozyme
    (bactericidal).
  • protects, cleans, lubricates and moistens the
    eyeball
  • spreads from lateral to medial by blinking
  • about 1ml of lacrimal fluid per day

22
Extraocular Muscles
  • Must be coordinated if not, diplopia may lead to
    loss of vision in one eye, or loss of depth
    perception

23
Anatomy of the Eye
24
Layers of the Eyeball
  • Fibrous tunic most superficial
  • Vascular tunic middle layer
  • Retina inner coat

25
1.Fibrous Tunic
  • Avascular
  • Cornea transparent layer that covers iris.
    Curved, to help focus light on retina. Receives
    oxygen from outside air. Can be transplanted no
    blood vessels
  • Sclera white of eye covers entire eyeball
    except cornea. Gives shape to the eyeball
  • Junction scleral venous sinus (canal of Schlemm)
    drains aqueous humor from anterior chamber
    (cavity)

26
2.Vascular Tunic
  • Choroid ciliary body iris
  • Choroid highly vascular layer lining inside of
    sclera. Provides nutrients to retina
  • Ciliary body contains a circular ciliary muscle
    with ciliary processes that secrete aqueous
    humor. The lens is suspended from the edges of
    the ciliary processes by suspensory ligaments
  • Iris colored portion. Contains circular and
    radial smooth muscles that regulate the size of
    the pupil. Melanocytes determine color.

27
Iris
  • The iris regulates the amount of light entering
    the eye by adjusting the size of the pupil
  • Pupillary reflex When bright light is shone
    into the eye, the circular muscles of the iris
    contract to constrict the pupil. Parasympathetic
    control.
  • In dim light, or excitement, the radial muscle of
    the iris contract, dilating the pupil.
    Sympathetic control

28
3. Retina
  • Innermost layer
  • lines posterior ¾ of eyeball
  • contains visual receptors which are the beginning
    of visual pathway
  • optic disc optic nerve (II) and central retinal
    artery and vein exit eyeball

29
Retina - Layers
  • Outer pigmented layer contains melanin to absorb
    stray light rays, preventing reflection and
    scattering, so image on retina remains sharp and
    clear
  • Inner neural layer outgrowth of brain.
    Processes visual data before sending to optic
    nerve

30
Photoreceptors
  • 6 million rods 120 million cones
  • Rods allow black-white vision in dim light
  • Cones need brighter light produce color vision
  • Feed information to bipolar cellsfor initial
    processing, then ganglion cells. Ganglion cell
    axons project through optic disc to brain.

31
Figure 16.10c
32
Central Fovea
  • small depression in exact center of posterior
    retina, in visual axis of eye
  • only cones (no rods)
  • connections to bipolar or ganglion cells are
    pushed to the side
  • area of highest visual acuity (macula)

Blind spot at optic disc, no photoreceptors
33
Lens
  • Thick, transparent, biconvex disc that changes
    shape to allow precise focusing of light on
    retina
  • Ciliary muscles control shape of lens through
    suspensory ligaments.
  • With age, lens becomes less elastic and cannot
    focus as well
  • Cataract clouding of the lens. May be caused by
    genetic factors, sun, smoking, or medications
    such as aspirin and steroids. Can be replaced by
    artificial lens

34
Circulation of Aqueous Humor
  • The anterior cavity of the eye is divided into
    anterior chamber (between cornea and iris) and
    posterior chamber (between iris and lens).
  • Aqueous humor (a watery fluid) is secreted by
    ciliary processes, and flows out through pupil
    and is absorbed into scleral venous sinus.
  • Replaced every 90 minutes.
  • Blockage glaucoma.
  • Increased pressure in
  • eye damages optic nerve

35
Vitreous Chamber
  • Behind lens
  • Filled with vitreous body, a jelly-like substance
  • Normally holds retina flush against choroid
    layer, but can shrink and pull away with age,
    leading to detached retina.

36
Image Formation
37
Refraction
  • light is bent (refracted) as it passes through
    cornea and lens. Near objects must be refracted
    more.
  • about 75 of refraction occurs at cornea, and is
    constant
  • other 25 occurs at lens, and is adjustable

38
Accommodation (focus)
  • A rounder lens refracts light more powerfully, so
    the lens is rounded for near vision
  • The shape of the lens is altered by the pull of
    the suspensory ligaments of the ciliary body.

39
Refraction Abnormalities
Eyeball too long
Eyeball too short
40
Visual Impulse Transmission
41
Photoreceptors
  • rods and cones named for shape of outer segment,
    filled with membrane discs
  • renewed rapidly rods 1-3 discs per hour
  • photopigments (proteins in plasma membrane of
    outer segment) absorb light

42
Retina
  • When photoreceptors are activated by light, they
    cease to inhibit bipolar cells, which then
    activate ganglion cells
  • Initial processing of visual information is
    performed in the retina itself
  • Ganglion cells send their axons through the optic
    disc to the optic nerve

43
Visual Pathway
  • Optic nerves partially cross at optic chiasm
  • Enter brain and terminate in the thalamus
  • Thalamic neurons project to visual cortex.
  • Right visual field projects to left visual cortex

thalamus
44
Figure 16.17a
45
Special Senses IIIHearing and Equilibrium
46
Anatomy of the Ear
47
Anatomy of Ear
  • external ear
  • collects sound waves and channels them inward
  • middle ear
  • conveys sound vibrations to oval window
  • internal (inner) ear
  • houses receptors for hearing and equilibrium

48
External Ear
  • Auricle collects sound waves and channels them
    inward
  • external auditory canal
  • tympanic membrane (ear drum)
  • ceruminous glands
  • secrete cerumen (ear wax)

49
Middle Ear
  • small air-filled cavity in temporal bone
  • separated from internal ear by thin bony wall
    containing two small membrane-covered openings
    oval window and round window
  • auditory ossicles malleus, incus, stapes
  • tiny skeletal muscles
  • tensor tympani muscle
  • stapedius muscle
  • anterior wall has auditory (Eustacian) tube which
    connects to nasopharynx, to equalize air pressure
    across the tympanic membrane

50
Figure 16.19
51
Ossicles
  • Smallest bones in the body
  • Connected by synovial joints
  • Amplify power of sound vibrations (20X) by acting
    as levers
  • Stapedius and tensor tympani muscles attach to
    stapes and malleus, and dampen loud sounds

52
Internal Ear
  • Houses receptors for hearing and equilibrium
  • receptors for hearing
  • cochlea
  • receptors for equilibrium
  • semicircular canals
  • vestibule

53
Internal Ear
  • A bony labyrinth in the temporal bone
  • Lined by a membranous labyrinth. The membranous
    labyrinth is surrounded by perilymph (similar to
    CSF), and encloses endolymph

54
Vestibule and semicircular canals
  • The vestibule is the central room in the bony
    labyrinth
  • It contains two membranous sacs, the utricle and
    the saccule, connected by a small duct
  • Connected to the vestibule are the semicircular
    canals, containing semicircular ducts lying at
    right angles to each other each contains an
    ampulla
  • Receptors for equilibrium lie here

55
Cochlea
  • Receptors for hearing are located in the cochlea,
    a bony spiral canal
  • Cross sections of the cochlea reveal that it is
    divided into three long chambers cochlear duct
    (membranous labyrinth, containing endolymph), and
    the scala tympani and scala vestibuli (perilymph)
  • The scalae communicate at the tip of the spiral,
    at the helicotrema

56
Windows
  • The stapes ossicle of the middle ear fits snugly
    into the oval window of the vestibule. When the
    stapes pulses from sound waves, it pushes on the
    perilymph in the scala vestibuli.
  • Pressure travels through the cochlea and is
    relieved at the round window, connected to the
    scala tympani, which bulges back out into the
    middle ear

57
Spiral Organ
  • In the cochlear duct lies the spiral organ of
    Corti (spiral organ), which houses the receptors
    for hearing

58
Spiral Organ
  • A specialized epithelium sitting on a basilar
    membrane, containing supporting cells and hair
    cells
  • Hair cells have bundles of microvilli projecting
    from apical end hair bundles.
  • Hairs project into endolymph and are of graded
    heights. Rub against a gelatinous tectorial
    membrane, projecting from vestibular membrane
  • Synapse with 1st-order sensory neurons of spiral
    ganglion

59
Figure 16.21d
60
Figure 16.21e
61
(No Transcript)
62
Sound Reception
63
Sound Waves
  • alternating high and low pressure regions
    traveling in same direction through a medium (air
    or fluid)
  • originate from a vibrating object
  • frequency number of waves that arrive in a given
    period (hertz)
  • interpreted as pitch
  • intensity or amplitude
  • more intense vibrations higher pressure waves
    louder sound
  • measured in decibels (dB)

64
Physiology of Hearing
  • auricle directs sound to tympanic membrane
  • tympanic membrane vibrates
  • vibration type determined by both intensity and
    frequency of sound waves
  • Vibrates slowly to low frequency waves
  • rapidly to high frequency waves
  • forceful vibrations when loud
  • gentle vibrations in softer sounds
  • tympanic membrane vibrates ossicles malleus
    vibrates incus, then to stapes
  • stapes pushes membrane of oval window

65
Physiology of Hearing
  • pressure waves in perilymph vibrate scala
    vestibuli in cochlea
  • scala vestibuli pressure waves vibrate scala
    tympani and round window
  • pressure waves in perilymph set up pressure waves
    in endolymph in cochlear duct, vibrating the
    basilar and vestibular membranes
  • basilar membrane moves hair cells against the
    tectorial membrane
  • leads to generation of nerve impulses to
    vestibulocochlear nerve

66
Hearing
67
Auditory Pathway
  • The hair cells synapse on sensory fibers of
    cochlear branch of vestibulocochlear nerve.
  • Cell bodies in spiral ganglion
  • Project to nuclei in pons, then to thalamus and
    auditory cortex in temporal lobe
  • Some inputs cross and some dont differences in
    timing allow localization of sound
  • Hair cells may be damaged by loud sounds, or lost
    with age, and cannot regenerate

68
Figure 16.21b
69
Figure 16.23
70
Equilibrium
71
Equilibrium
  • The receptors for equilibrium are found in the
    saccule, the utricle and the semicircular ducts
    the vestibular apparatus

72
Otolithic Organs
  • Within the walls of the utricle and saccule lie
    thickened epithelia called maculae.
  • Receptors for static equilibrium sense of body
    position in relation to gravity
  • The maculae contain hair cells with hair bundles
    projecting into a gelatinous otolithic membrane.
  • A layer of calcium carbonate crystals, otoliths,
    cover the membrane
  • As head tips, otoliths move, stimulating hair
    cells

73
(No Transcript)
74
Semicircular Ducts
  • Within the ampullae of the semicircular ducts lie
    cristae
  • Each crista contains hair cells that project into
    gelatinous cupula.
  • When head moves in the plane of a particular
    semicircular duct, the endolymph of that duct
    swirls deforms the cupula, stimulating the hair
    cells
  • Yes stimulates anterior canal, no stimulates
    lateral canal, and lateral flexion stimulates
    posterior canal.
  • Sense of dynamic equilibrium sense of movement

75
(No Transcript)
76
(No Transcript)
77
Equilibrium Pathways
  • The hair cells synapse on 1st-order sensory cells
    with cell bodies in the vestibular ganglion
  • Project to nuclei in brainstem and the
    cerebellum, to control balance
  • Strong input to nuclei that control eye movements
    the vestibulo-ocular reflex
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com