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Created page with '{{toplink |linkpage =Nervous and Special Senses - Anatomy & Physiology |linktext =Nervous and Special Senses |maplink = Nervous System and Special Senses (Content Map) - Anatomy …'
{{toplink
|linkpage =Nervous and Special Senses - Anatomy & Physiology
|linktext =Nervous and Special Senses
|maplink = Nervous System and Special Senses (Content Map) - Anatomy & Physiology
|pagetype =Anatomy
|sublink1=Sensory Pathways - Anatomy & Physiology
|subtext1=Sensory Pathways
}}
<FlashCard questions="12">
|q1=What types of general somatic sensory information are there?
|a1=Pain; touch; temperature; kinaesthesia
|l1=Sensory Pathways - Anatomy & Physiology#Introduction
|q2=Where is sensory information processed if it isn't percieved consciously?
|a2=Cerebellum
|l2=Sensory Pathways - Anatomy & Physiology#Introduction
|q3=True or false: "Dorsal columns reach the cerebellum on the contralateral side of the body?"
|a3=False - they reach the thalamus and are percieved consciously
|l3=Sensory Pathways - Anatomy & Physiology#Dorsal Columns
|q4=What types of information do the dorsal columns transmit?
|a4=Touch and kinaesthesia
|l4=Sensory Pathways - Anatomy & Physiology#Dorsal Columns
|q5=Which sensory pathway is absent in man?
|a5=Spinocervicothalamic
|l5=Sensory Pathways - Anatomy & Physiology#Spinocervicothalamic Tract
|q6=What type of information does the spinothalamic tract transmit?
|a6=Temperature and "pin prick" pain
|l6=Sensory Pathways - Anatomy & Physiology#Spinothalamic Tract
|q7=What type of information does the spinocerebellar tract transmit?
|a7=Kinaesthesia
|l7=Sensory Pathways - Anatomy & Physiology#Spinocerebellar Tract
|q8=What type of information does the ascending reticular formation transmit?
|a8=True pain sensation - long lasting pain
|l8=Sensory Pathways - Anatomy & Physiology#Ascending Reticular Formation
|q9=What is different about this pathway?
|a9=It consists of several short neurones
|l9=Sensory Pathways - Anatomy & Physiology#Ascending Reticular Formation
|q10=Is it unilateral or bilateral?
|a10=Bilateral
|l10=Sensory Pathways - Anatomy & Physiology#Ascending Reticular Formation
|q11=What is the prognosis for an animal that has lost deep pain sensation?
|a11=Poor
|l11=Sensory Pathways - Anatomy & Physiology#Pain
|q12=What is referred pain?
|a12=When pain is felt in a part of the body that is undamaged but served by the same section of the spinal cord
|l12=Sensory Pathways - Anatomy & Physiology#Pain
</FlashCard>
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