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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Myelinated afferent fibres responding specifically to noxious stimulation of the skin

Paul R. Burgess, +1 more
- 01 Jun 1967 - 
- Vol. 190, Iss: 3, pp 541-562
TLDR
The characteristics of receptors from the hairy skin of the hind limb of cat were studied by recording from single primary afferent fibres with fine micropipettes with distinctive features of 513 fibres conducting under 51 m/sec.
Abstract
1. The characteristics of receptors from the hairy skin of the hind limb of cat were studied by recording from single primary afferent fibres with fine micropipettes. The distinctive features of 513 fibres conducting under 51 m/sec are described. 2. Seventy-four fibres conducting between 6 and 37 m/sec were classified as nociceptors because they responded only to damaging mechanical stimulation of the skin. These fibres responded maximally to pinching the skin with a serrated forceps or to cutting the skin. Noxious heat, noxious cold, acid applied to the receptive field and bradykinin injected into skin cuts did not evoke discharges from such receptors. Typically their receptive fields were 2-5 cm long by 1-2·5 cm wide and consisted of responsive spots (under 1 mm diameter) separated by unresponsive areas. There was a tendency for the most slowly conducting fibres so classified to be the least sensitive. 3. Other afferent fibres had receptive fields similar to the nociceptors; however, they were excited by substantial but not noxious mechanical deformation. Their conduction velocities overlapped those of the nociceptors and extended upwards to 51 m/sec; the most rapidly conducting fibres tended to be the most sensitive to mechanical stimuli. These insensitive mechanoreceptors or moderate pressure receptors adapted more slowly than the nociceptors. 4. The majority of fine myelinated axons originated from hair receptors and had conduction velocities concentrated between 14 and 22 m/sec. 5. The possible relation of these observations to pain and reactions typical of pain is considered.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Central sensitization: implications for the diagnosis and treatment of pain.

TL;DR: Diagnostic criteria to establish the presence of central sensitization in patients will greatly assist the phenotyping of patients for choosing treatments that produce analgesia by normalizing hyperexcitable central neural activity.
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Molecular mechanisms of nociception

TL;DR: Efforts to determine how primary sensory neurons detect pain-producing stimuli of a thermal, mechanical or chemical nature have revealed new signalling mechanisms and brought us closer to understanding the molecular events that facilitate transitions from acute to persistent pain.
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The Sensory Neurons of Touch

TL;DR: An integrative model in which ensembles of impulses arising from physiologically distinct LTMRs are integrated and processed in somatotopically aligned mechanosensory columns of the spinal cord dorsal horn underlies the nervous system's enormous capacity for perceiving the richness of the tactile world.
Journal ArticleDOI

Response of cutaneous sensory units with unmyelinated fibers to noxious stimuli.

TL;DR: In an attempt to learn more about the range of behavior associated with the terminals of cutaneous C fibers, a number of randomly sele,cted units were surveyed for responses to a variety of graded stimuli.
Journal ArticleDOI

Peripheral and central mechanisms of cutaneous hyperalgesia.

TL;DR: In the literature, there are some contradictions with respect to the stimulus modalities to which hyperalgesia and sensitization occur and this contradiction should spawn further investigations into the mechanical response properties of nociceptors and into the molecular mechanisms of heat sensitization.
References
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Journal Article

Pain mechanisms: a new theory

Ronald Melzack, +1 more
- 01 Jan 1994 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, a new theory of pain mechanisms is proposed, which is based on the idea that the nerve impulse pattern for pain is produced by intense stimulation of nonspecific receptors since there are no specific fibers and no apecific endings.
Journal ArticleDOI

Touch, pain and tickling: an electro-physiological investigation on cutaneous sensory nerves

TL;DR: The present research was started in order to study the response of the thinnest afferent fibres to various stimuli applied to the skin to provide some fixed points for the correlation of results from different experiments.
Journal ArticleDOI

Functional analysis of group III afferent fibres of mammalian muscles.

TL;DR: The experiments to be described in this paper were specifically designed to elucidate the behaviour of these Group III endings, the basic procedure being to isolate a Group III afferent fibre, i.e. one with a conduction velocity below 24 m/ sec, and to determine how its ending could be stimulated.
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