Back to chapter

18.5:

Major Somatic Sensory Pathways

JoVE 핵심
Anatomy and Physiology
JoVE 비디오를 활용하시려면 도서관을 통한 기관 구독이 필요합니다.  전체 비디오를 보시려면 로그인하거나 무료 트라이얼을 시작하세요.
JoVE 핵심 Anatomy and Physiology
Major Somatic Sensory Pathways

Languages

소셜에 공유하기

The major somatic sensory pathways include the posterior column-medial lemniscus, the spinothalamic, and the spinocerebellar pathways.

The posterior column-medial lemniscus pathway transmits touch and proprioceptive information.

This pathway is composed of paired tracts of the dorsal column— the gracile tract, carrying impulses from the lower body, and the cuneate tract, carrying impulses from the upper body. In the medulla, these tracts cross over to the medial lemniscus tract, which finally projects to the cerebral cortex.

The spinothalamic pathway transmits stimuli related to pain, temperature, and crude touch to the cerebral cortex.

This pathway consists of two main tracts—the lateral spinothalamic tract, which carries information related to pain and temperature, and the anterior spinothalamic tract, which transmits information related to crude touch.

Finally, the spinocerebellar pathway transmits proprioceptive information from muscles, tendons, and joints to the cerebellum for coordination and balance.

This pathway includes the dorsal and ventral tracts that transmit proprioceptive impulses from the lower extremities and the cuneocerebellar and rostral spinocerebellar tract, which transmit similar impulses from the upper extremities.

18.5:

Major Somatic Sensory Pathways

Sensory impulses related to touch, pressure, vibration, and proprioception from various body parts, such as the limbs, trunk, neck, and posterior head, travel to the cerebral cortex through the posterior column-medial lemniscus pathway. The pathway’s name derives from the two white-matter tracts that convey the impulses: the spinal cord's posterior column and the brainstem's medial lemniscus. First-order sensory neurons extend their axons into the spinal cord, forming the posterior columns consisting of two tracts, the gracile fasciculus and the cuneate fasciculus. Sensations from the lower part of the body travel through the gracile fasciculus tract, while sensations from the upper parts travel through the cuneate fasciculus tract. The axons synapse with second-order neurons located in the gracile or cuneate nucleus of the medulla, respectively, which then cross to the opposite side of the medulla and enter the medial lemniscus tract. The axons of the second-order neurons synapse with third-order neurons in the thalamus, which then project their axons to the primary somatosensory cortex.

Sensory impulses for pain, temperature, itch, and tickle from body parts such as the limbs, trunk, neck, and posterior head travel up to the cerebral cortex through the anterolateral or the spinothalamic pathway. The first-order neurons of this pathway connect sensory receptors of the body parts with the spinal cord. These first-order neurons have their cell bodies located in the posterior root ganglion, and their axon terminals synapse with second-order neurons located in the posterior gray horn of the spinal cord. The axons of the second-order neurons cross to the opposite side of the spinal cord and ascend to the brainstem as the spinothalamic tract. These axons end in the ventral posterior nucleus of the thalamus, where they synapse with third-order neurons. The axons of these third-order neurons project to the primary somatosensory area on the same side of the cerebral cortex as the thalamus.

The anterior and posterior spinocerebellar tract are the primary pathways through which proprioceptive impulses reach the cerebellum. These pathways transmit sensory information related to posture, balance, and coordination of skilled movements. The neurons of this pathway either do not cross over or cross over twice, so they reach the cerebellum on the same side as that of the impulse. Although these sensory impulses are not consciously perceived, they regulate movements and maintain balance.