SenSory SyStemS 269
What are somatic sensations?
- Somatic sensations include touch, pressure, heat and cold, pain,
itching, limb motions, and changes in body positions. They are
detected by free nerve endings and encapsulated receptors. - The phenomenon of referred pain arises when the brain
misidentifies the bodily origin of a pain signal.
taKe-Home message
midbrain send signals that call for the release of endorphins
and enkephalins. These are natural opiates (morphine-like
substances) that, like morphine derived from opium pop-
pies, reduce our ability to perceive pain. Morphine, hypno-
sis, and natural childbirth techniques may also stimulate
the release of these natural opiates.
Referred pain is a matter of perception
A person’s perception of pain often depends on the brain’s
ability to identify the affected tissue. Get hit in the face
Ruffini endings
(pressure, touch)
free nerve
endings
(pain) hair
Meissner’s
corpuscle
(light touch)
Merkel’s discs
(steady touch)
hair follicle
receptor
(hair displacement)
Pacinian
corpuscle
(deep pressure,
vibrations)
epidermis
subcutaneous
layer
dermis
Pacinian
corpuscle
Meissner’s
corpuscle
Ruffini
endings
Merkel’s discs
Figure 14.5 In referred pain, the brain projects a sensation
from an internal organ to an area of the skin. (© Cengage Learning)
lungs,
diaphragm
heart
liver, gallbladder
stomach
small intestine
ovaries
colon
appendix
urinary
bladder
kidney
ureter
Figure 14.4 The skin contains a variety of sensory receptors. (© Cengage Learning)
with a snowball and you “feel” the contact on facial skin.
However, sensations of pain from some inter nal organs
may be wrongly projected to part of the skin surface. This
response, called referred pain, is related to the way the ner-
vous system is built. Sensory information from the skin
and from certain internal organs may enter the spinal
cord along the same nerve pathways, so the brain can’t
accurately identify their source. For example, as shown in
Figure 14.5, a heart attack can be felt as pain in skin above
the heart and along the left shoulder and arm, or between
the shoulder blades.
Referred pain is not the same as the phantom pain
reported by amputees. Often people who have lost a body
part sense the presence of the missing part, as if it were
still there. In some undetermined way, sensory nerves that
were cut during the amputation continue to respond to the
trauma. The brain projects the pain back to the missing
part, past the healed region.
Frederic Cirou/PhotoAlto/Corbis
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