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Special senses

Special senses. Two types of peripheral nerve terminals Terminals of axons, which transmit impulses from the CNS to skeletal or smooth muscles (motor

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Page 1: Special senses. Two types of peripheral nerve terminals Terminals of axons, which transmit impulses from the CNS to skeletal or smooth muscles (motor

Special senses

Page 2: Special senses. Two types of peripheral nerve terminals Terminals of axons, which transmit impulses from the CNS to skeletal or smooth muscles (motor

Two types of peripheral nerve terminals

• Terminals of axons, which transmit impulses from the CNS to skeletal or smooth muscles (motor endings), or to glands (secretory endings)

• Terminals of dendrites, called sensory nerve endings or receptors, which perceive various stimuli and transmit this sensory input to the CNS

Page 3: Special senses. Two types of peripheral nerve terminals Terminals of axons, which transmit impulses from the CNS to skeletal or smooth muscles (motor

Receptors are classified into 3 types

• Exteroceptors – located near the body surface, are specialized to perceive stimuli from the external environment; other exteroceptors include receptors for vision, hearing, smell and taste

• Interoceptors – are specialized to perceive sensory information from visceral organs

• Proprioceptors – located in joint capsules, tendons, muscle spindles, inner ear, are specialized to perceive information that relates to an awareness of the body in space and movement

Page 4: Special senses. Two types of peripheral nerve terminals Terminals of axons, which transmit impulses from the CNS to skeletal or smooth muscles (motor

Eye:organ for visual perception

Page 5: Special senses. Two types of peripheral nerve terminals Terminals of axons, which transmit impulses from the CNS to skeletal or smooth muscles (motor

Anatomy of the eye

Page 6: Special senses. Two types of peripheral nerve terminals Terminals of axons, which transmit impulses from the CNS to skeletal or smooth muscles (motor

Anatomy of the eye• Tunica externa– Cornea– Sclera

• Tunica vasculosa– Choroid– Corpus ciliaris– Iris

• Retina– Fovea centralis (yellow spot)– Optic nerve disc (blind spot)– Pars iridica et pars ciliaris (non-visual retina)

Page 7: Special senses. Two types of peripheral nerve terminals Terminals of axons, which transmit impulses from the CNS to skeletal or smooth muscles (motor

Three layers of the eye

Page 8: Special senses. Two types of peripheral nerve terminals Terminals of axons, which transmit impulses from the CNS to skeletal or smooth muscles (motor

Important components of the eye• Schlemm’s canal• Anterior chamber• Posterior chamber• Pupil• Ciliary processes• Aqueous humor• Ciliary muscle• Lens• Zonula fibers• Corpus vitreum

Page 9: Special senses. Two types of peripheral nerve terminals Terminals of axons, which transmit impulses from the CNS to skeletal or smooth muscles (motor

Eye development

Page 10: Special senses. Two types of peripheral nerve terminals Terminals of axons, which transmit impulses from the CNS to skeletal or smooth muscles (motor

LM of the cornea

Page 11: Special senses. Two types of peripheral nerve terminals Terminals of axons, which transmit impulses from the CNS to skeletal or smooth muscles (motor

CorneaThe cornea is the transparent bulging anterior

1/6 of the eye. Structure of the cornea: • Anterior epithelium (stratified squamous

non-keratinized with the naked nerve endings, responsible for corneal reflex)

• Bowman’s membrane• Stroma (connective tissue lamina propria)• Descemet’s membrane• Posterior epithelium (corneal endothelium)

Page 12: Special senses. Two types of peripheral nerve terminals Terminals of axons, which transmit impulses from the CNS to skeletal or smooth muscles (motor

Sclera

• The white, opaque sclera covers the posterior five-sixths of the orb

• Sclera is composed of type I collagen fibers interlaced with elastic fibers

• Sclera is enveloped with the capsule of Tenon• Thin layer of loose connective tissue between

sclera and capsula of Tenon is called episclera

Page 13: Special senses. Two types of peripheral nerve terminals Terminals of axons, which transmit impulses from the CNS to skeletal or smooth muscles (motor

Anterior segment of the eye

Page 14: Special senses. Two types of peripheral nerve terminals Terminals of axons, which transmit impulses from the CNS to skeletal or smooth muscles (motor

IrisThe iris, the colored anterior extension of the choroid,

is a contractile diaphragm that controls the pupillary aperture. Its structure:

• Anterior surface covered by incomplete layer of fibroblasts and melanocytes

• Connective tissue stroma enriched with fibroblasts and melanocytes

• Dilator and sphincter pupillae muscle• Posterior surface is smooth, covered by heavily

pigmented melanocytes

Page 15: Special senses. Two types of peripheral nerve terminals Terminals of axons, which transmit impulses from the CNS to skeletal or smooth muscles (motor

Anterior segment of the eye

Page 16: Special senses. Two types of peripheral nerve terminals Terminals of axons, which transmit impulses from the CNS to skeletal or smooth muscles (motor

Ciliary body• Ciliary muscle contraction has responsibility for the

process called accomodation: contraction of ciliary muscle makes lens more convex, enabling focusing the eye on nearby objects

• Ciliary processes (about 70) radiate from the central connective tissue core towards the lens; ciliary processes produce aqueous humor

• Zonular fibers, radiating from the ciliary processes to insert into the lens capsule, regulate convexity of the lens

Page 17: Special senses. Two types of peripheral nerve terminals Terminals of axons, which transmit impulses from the CNS to skeletal or smooth muscles (motor

LM of iridocorneal angle

Page 18: Special senses. Two types of peripheral nerve terminals Terminals of axons, which transmit impulses from the CNS to skeletal or smooth muscles (motor

Aqueous humor turnover

• Ciliary processes produce aqueous humor which is responsible for the maintenance of intraocular pressure

• Corneo-scleral junction (limbus of the eye) houses canal of Schlemm, which is the site of outflow of the aqueous humor from the anterior chamber of the eye into the venous system

Page 19: Special senses. Two types of peripheral nerve terminals Terminals of axons, which transmit impulses from the CNS to skeletal or smooth muscles (motor

Ciliary body, iris, and pupil viewed from behind

Page 20: Special senses. Two types of peripheral nerve terminals Terminals of axons, which transmit impulses from the CNS to skeletal or smooth muscles (motor

Anterior segment of the eye, LM of the lens

Page 21: Special senses. Two types of peripheral nerve terminals Terminals of axons, which transmit impulses from the CNS to skeletal or smooth muscles (motor

The developing lens and SEM of mature lens fibers

Page 22: Special senses. Two types of peripheral nerve terminals Terminals of axons, which transmit impulses from the CNS to skeletal or smooth muscles (motor

Retina

Page 23: Special senses. Two types of peripheral nerve terminals Terminals of axons, which transmit impulses from the CNS to skeletal or smooth muscles (motor

Retina: 10 layers • Pigmented epithelium• Rods and cones photosensitive layer• Outer limiting membrane• Outer nuclear layer• Outer plexiform layer• Inner nuclear layer• Inner plexiform layer• Ganglion cell layer• Optic nerve fiber layer• Inner limiting membrane

Page 24: Special senses. Two types of peripheral nerve terminals Terminals of axons, which transmit impulses from the CNS to skeletal or smooth muscles (motor

LM of the retina with its 10 layers

Page 25: Special senses. Two types of peripheral nerve terminals Terminals of axons, which transmit impulses from the CNS to skeletal or smooth muscles (motor

Retina: cellular composition

• Pigmented epithelium• Photosensory (bipolar) neurons• Bipolar (associative) neurons• Horizontal cells (neurons)• Amacrine cells (neurons)• Muller cells (radial gliocytes)• Ganglion cells (neurons)

Page 26: Special senses. Two types of peripheral nerve terminals Terminals of axons, which transmit impulses from the CNS to skeletal or smooth muscles (motor

Cellular composition of the retina

Page 27: Special senses. Two types of peripheral nerve terminals Terminals of axons, which transmit impulses from the CNS to skeletal or smooth muscles (motor

Rods and cones• Light sensitive (photoreceptor) functions of the retina

are attributed to rods and cones - modified dendrites of retinal photosensory neurons

• Rods are sensitive to dim light; each eye contains about 100-120 million rods; each rod consists of membranous discs, into which photosensitive pigment rhodopsin is incorporated

• There are 3 types of cones, which are sensitive to red, green, and blue lightwaves; each eye consist about 6 million cones, into membranous discs of which photopigment iodopsin is incorporated

Page 28: Special senses. Two types of peripheral nerve terminals Terminals of axons, which transmit impulses from the CNS to skeletal or smooth muscles (motor

Morphology of a rod and a cone

Page 29: Special senses. Two types of peripheral nerve terminals Terminals of axons, which transmit impulses from the CNS to skeletal or smooth muscles (motor

LM and EM of retinal rods

Page 30: Special senses. Two types of peripheral nerve terminals Terminals of axons, which transmit impulses from the CNS to skeletal or smooth muscles (motor

EM of rods (A, B) and of cones (C, D) fragments

Page 31: Special senses. Two types of peripheral nerve terminals Terminals of axons, which transmit impulses from the CNS to skeletal or smooth muscles (motor

EM of a retinal rod segments

Page 32: Special senses. Two types of peripheral nerve terminals Terminals of axons, which transmit impulses from the CNS to skeletal or smooth muscles (motor

Blood supply of the eye

Page 33: Special senses. Two types of peripheral nerve terminals Terminals of axons, which transmit impulses from the CNS to skeletal or smooth muscles (motor

Retina and choroid

Page 34: Special senses. Two types of peripheral nerve terminals Terminals of axons, which transmit impulses from the CNS to skeletal or smooth muscles (motor

Ora serrata, optic nerve disc, and fovea centralis

Page 35: Special senses. Two types of peripheral nerve terminals Terminals of axons, which transmit impulses from the CNS to skeletal or smooth muscles (motor

Eyelid

Page 36: Special senses. Two types of peripheral nerve terminals Terminals of axons, which transmit impulses from the CNS to skeletal or smooth muscles (motor

Eyelid and conjunctiva

Page 37: Special senses. Two types of peripheral nerve terminals Terminals of axons, which transmit impulses from the CNS to skeletal or smooth muscles (motor

Lacrimal apparatus

Page 38: Special senses. Two types of peripheral nerve terminals Terminals of axons, which transmit impulses from the CNS to skeletal or smooth muscles (motor

Ophtalmological pathologies• Eyesore: non-transparent cornea • Glaucoma: excess of intraocular pressure• Cataract: non-transparent lens• Presbyopia: decreased elasticity of the lens• Eye floaters: vitreous opacities• Detachment of the retina• Chalazion: Meibomian cyst, tarsal cyst• Hordeolum (sty): bacterial inflammation of the

sweat gland or gland of Zeiss of an eyelid• Conjunctivitis: inflammation of conjunctiva