Innervate in the context of Merkel nerve ending


Innervate in the context of Merkel nerve ending

Innervate Study page number 1 of 1

Play TriviaQuestions Online!

or

Skip to study material about Innervate in the context of "Merkel nerve ending"


HINT:

👉 Innervate in the context of Merkel nerve ending

Merkel nerve endings (also Merkel's disks, or Merkel tactile endings) are mechanoreceptors situated in the basal epidermis as well as around the apical ends or some hair follicles. They are slowly adapting. They have small receptive fields measuring some millimeters in diameter. Most are associated with fast-conducting large myelinated axons. A single afferent nerve fibre branches to innervate up to 90 such endings. Merkel nerve endings respond to light touch. They respond to sustained pressure, and are sensitive to edges of objects. Their exact functions remain controversial.

The Merkel nerve endings consist of a nerve ending associated with a flattened epithelial cell (Merkel cell); both the nerve ending and Merkel cell are independently mechanosensitive. The Merkel cell expresses the PIEZO2 mechanosensitive ion channels; mechanical activation of the channel causes depolarisation of the Merkel cell and consequent release of serotonin into a synapse with the associated nerve ending, to also depolarise the later. The nerve ending, meanwhile, expresses an unknown mechanosensitive channel.

↓ Explore More Topics
In this Dossier

Innervate in the context of Double vision

Diplopia is the simultaneous perception of two images of a single object that may be displaced in relation to each other. Also called double vision, it is a loss of visual focus under regular conditions, and is often voluntary. However, when occurring involuntarily, it results from impaired function of the extraocular muscles, where both eyes are still functional, but they cannot turn to target the desired object. Problems with these muscles may be due to mechanical problems, disorders of the neuromuscular junction, disorders of the cranial nerves (III, IV, and VI) that innervate the muscles, and occasionally disorders involving the supranuclear oculomotor pathways or ingestion of toxins.

Diplopia can be one of the first signs of a systemic disease, particularly to a muscular or neurological process, and it may disrupt a person's balance, movement, or reading abilities.

View the full Wikipedia page for Double vision
↑ Return to Menu