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  • When it comes to the nervous system, or just your body in general, let’s face it:

  • your brain gets all the props.

  • And it deserves those props! It’s a complicated, and crucial, and sometimes crazy boss of an organ.

  • But your brain would be pretty useless without a support team that kept it

  • connected to the outside world.

  • Because frankly, like any leader, the more isolated your brain gets, the weirder it gets.

  • Put a person in a watery, pitch-black sensory deprivation tank, and youll see the brain

  • do some really weird stuff. Without a constant flood of external information, the brain starts

  • to confuse its own thoughts for actual experiences, leading you to hallucinate the taste of cheeseburgers,

  • or the sound of a choir singing, or the sight of pink stampeding elephants.

  • It’s your peripheral nervous system that keeps things real, by putting your brain in

  • touch with the physical environment around you, and allowing it to respond. This network snakes

  • through just about every part of your body, providing the central nervous system with

  • information ranging from the temperature, to the touch of a hand on your shoulder, to a twisted ankle.

  • The peripheral nervous system’s sensory nerve receptors spy on the world for the central

  • nervous system, and each type responds to different kinds of stimuli.

  • Thermoreceptors respond to changes in temperature. photoreceptors react to light, chemoreceptors

  • pay attention to chemicals, and mechanoreceptors respond to pressure, touch, and vibration.

  • And then weve got specialized nerve receptors called nociceptors that, unlike those other

  • receptors, fire only to indicate pain, which is the main thing I want to talk about today.

  • Because, as unpleasant as a stick in the eye or tack in the foot may be, pain is actually

  • a great example of where everything weve talked about over the last few weeks all comes together,

  • as we trace a pain signal through your nervous system, from the first cuss to the Hello Kitty band aid.

  • By the end of this episode of Crash Course Anatomy & Physiology youll never think

  • of a stubbed toe, pounding headache, or burned tongue the same way again.

  • Most people go to great lengths to avoid pain, but really, it’s an incredibly useful sensation,

  • because it helps protect us from ourselves, and from the outside world.

  • If youre feeling physical pain, it probably means that your body is under stress, damaged,

  • or in danger, and your nervous system is sending a cease and desist signal to stop twisting

  • your arm like that, or to back away from that bonfire, or please seek medical attention, like, RIGHT NOW.

  • So in that way, pain is actually good for you -- that’s why it exists. I’m not saying

  • it’s pleasant, but if youve ever wished for an X-Men-like power to be impervious to

  • pain, I’ve gotta say, that is one foolish monkey’s paw of a wish.

  • Just ask Ashlyn Blocker. She’s got a genetic mutation that’s given her a total insensitivity

  • to any kind of pain. And as a result, she’s absent-mindedly dunked her hands in pots of

  • boiling water, run around for days without noticing broken bones, and nearly chewed off her own tongue.

  • Luckily, such congenital conditions are very rare. The rest of us have a whole nervous

  • system dedicated to making sure our bodies react with a predictable chain of events at the first sign of damage.

  • Like say you just wake up and youre extraordinarily hungry for some reason, so you run downstairs

  • to grab some clam chowder, but you didn’t put any shoes on and suddenly youre like, “YOWW!”

  • There’s a tack, fell out of the wall, and you stepped right on it -- of course.

  • Your foot immediately lifts off the ground, and then youre assuring your dog that youre

  • not yelling at her, youre just yelling, and then you limp over to the couch, and sit

  • down, and you pull up your foot, and remove that spiny devil from your flesh.

  • You want to talk physiology? So what exactly just happened in your body?

  • Well, the first step was a change in your environment -- that is, a stimulus that activated

  • some of your sensory receptors.

  • In this case, it was a change from the probably completely ignored feeling of bare skin on

  • a smooth floor to a distinct feeling of discomfort -- the sharp metal tack piercing your skin.

  • Your peripheral nervous system’s mechano- and nociceptors provided that base sensation,

  • or awareness that something had changed.

  • Then it went to your central nervous system -- first to the spinal cord that caused the

  • immediate reflexive action of pulling up your foot, and then your brain eventually interpreted that

  • awareness into the perception of pain, and decided to pull the tack out and probably say an expletive or two.

  • Pain itself is a pretty subjective feeling, but the fact is, we all have the same pain threshold.

  • That is, the point where a stimulus is intense enough to trigger action potentials in those

  • nociceptors is the same for everybody. But, you and I might have different tolerances for discomfort.

  • In general, most doctors think of pain as the perception of pain -- whatever any given brain says pain is.

  • So, youve got the stimulating event -- foot meets tack -- and then the reception of that

  • signal, as the nociceptors in your foot sense that stimulus, and then the transmission of

  • that signal through your nerves to your spinal cord and eventually up to the brain.

  • Now remember back how every neuron in your body has a membrane that keeps positive and negative

  • charges separated across its boundaries, like a battery sitting around waiting for something to happen?

  • Well that tack in your flesh is that something. And it snaps those nociceptors to attention.

  • Some neurons have mechanically-gated receptors that respond to a stretch in their membranes

  • -- in this case, that happens when the tack punches through them.

  • Meanwhile, other neurons have ligand-gated receptors that open when the damaged skin

  • tissue releases chemicals like histamine or potassium ions.

  • These channels allow sodium ions to flood into the neuron, causing a graded potential,

  • if that hits the right threshold, it activates the electrical event that sends the signal

  • all the way up the axon and gets one neuron talking to another -- the action potential.

  • When that action potential races down the length of its axon to the terminal, the message

  • hits the synapse that then flings it over that synaptic gap to another neuron that’s in your spinal cord.

  • Remember, signals travel between neurons either by electrical or chemical synapses.

  • The electrical ones send an electrical impulse, while the chemical ones -- the ones I’m

  • talking about now -- first convert that signal from electrical to chemical, by activating

  • neurotransmitters to bridge the synaptic gap, before the receiving neuron converts that

  • chemical signal back into an electrical one.

  • In this case, news of the tack-attack is carried by specific neurotransmitters whose sole job

  • is to pass along pain messages.

  • Now, so far, your body’s response to the stimulus has been handled by the sensory,

  • or afferent, division of your peripheral nervous system. This is the part that’s involved

  • expressly in collecting data and sending it to the central nervous system.

  • But at this point, the responsibility changes hands. The torch is passed.

  • Because the pain signal has just triggered an action potential in a neuron in the spinal

  • cord, which is part of the central nervous system, and there it reaches an integration center.

  • From here, the response is taken over by the motor, or efferent division.

  • Once the integration center interprets the signal, it transmits the message to motor

  • neurons, which send an action potential back down your leg, where it reaches an effector.

  • And an effector is just any structure that receives and reacts to a motor neuron’s

  • signal, like a muscle contracting or a gland secreting a hormone.

  • From here, the motor neurons complete the whole foot-lifting response until the rest

  • of your nervous system gets engaged in the complicated tasks of figuring out what the

  • problem is, and fixing it.

  • Those are the five steps that your highly specific neural pathways go through to produce

  • what’s known as a reflex arc.

  • A lot of your body’s control systems boil down to reflexes just like this -- immediate

  • reactions that can either be innate or learned, but don’t need much conscious processing in the brain.

  • Lifting your foot when you step on a tack is an innate, or intrinsic, reflex action

  • -- a super fast motor response to a startling stimulus.

  • These reflexes are so invested in your self-preservation that you actually can’t think about them

  • before you respond.

  • All this processing happens in the spinal cord, so that the control of muscles can be

  • initiated before the pain is actually perceived by the brain.

  • Learned, or acquired reflexes on the other hand, come from experience. Like how you learn

  • to dodge obstacles while riding a bike or driving a car. That process is also largely

  • automatic, but you learn those reflexes by spending time behind the wheel, or behind the handlebars.

  • And reflex arcs stimulate some muscles, while inhibiting others. For example, the tack in

  • your right foot ended up activating the motor neurons in your right hip flexors and hamstring,

  • causing that knee to bend and your foot to lift up.

  • But it also told the quad muscles in your left leg to extend and stand tall, allowing

  • you to shift your body’s weight off the tack.

  • Of course not all reflexes come from pain, as youve probably experienced when a doctor

  • tapped your knee and your foot kicked.

  • Your muscles and tendons are very sensitive to being stretched too far, or too fast, because

  • that kind of movement can cause injury.

  • So for this we have receptors called muscle and tendon spindles that specifically sense

  • stretching. If triggered by an over-stretch, they generate a reflex arc that contracts

  • the muscle to keep it from stretching further.

  • So, when does the brain actually get involved in all this?

  • Well, when your spinal cord sent impulses down the motor neurons, it also sent signals

  • up your spinal cord toward the brain.

  • News of the tack arrived first at your thalamus, the information switchboard that then split

  • the message and sent it to the somatosensory cortex -- which identifies and localizes the

  • pain, like: “sharp, and foot”; as well as the limbic system, which registers emotional

  • suffering -- like, “why tack? Why me?!” And it also went to the frontal cortex, which

  • made sense of it all, assigning meaning to the pain -- like, “oh, I see this tack fell

  • from the Crash Course poster on the wall here.”

  • So basically, although your body has been reacting all along, it’s not until those

  • pain signals hit the brain that you have the conscious thoughts of bothdang, that hurt,”

  • andoh, that hurt because I stepped on a specific pointy thing.“

  • And this is where I want to point out that we here at Crash Course cannot be held responsible

  • for any injuries sustained in the process of owning a Crash Course poster. Enjoy them

  • at your own risk.

  • Today you got your first look at the peripheral nervous system, by learning how the afferent

  • and efferent divisions provide information about, and responses to, pain. You learned

  • about the five steps of the reflex arc, the different kinds of reflexes you have, and

  • what your brain has to say about all that pain, once the news is finally broken to it.

  • Crash Course is now on Patreon! Big thanks to all of our supporters on Patreon who make

  • Crash Course possible for themselves and for the whole rest of the world through their

  • monthly contributions. If you like Crash Course and you want to help us keep making great

  • new videos like this one, you can check out Patreon.com/CrashCourse

  • This episode was written by Kathleen Yale. The script was edited by Blake de Pastino,

  • and our consultant, is Dr. Brandon Jackson. It was directed by Nicholas Jenkins, edited

  • by Nicole Sweeney, and our graphics team is Thought Café.

When it comes to the nervous system, or just your body in general, let’s face it:

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