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Ch. 13 The Spinal Cord, Spinal Nerves, and Spinal Reflexes
Martini - Fundamentals of Anatomy and Physiology 12th Edition
Martini, Nath, Bartholomew12th EditionFundamentals of Anatomy and PhysiologyISBN: 9780137854011Not the one you use?Change textbook
Chapter 13, Problem 27

What effect does the stimulation of a sensory neuron that innervates an intrafusal muscle fiber have on muscle tone?

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Step 1: Understand the components involved. Sensory neurons that innervate intrafusal muscle fibers are part of the muscle spindle, which is a sensory receptor within the muscle that detects changes in muscle length.
Step 2: Recognize the role of intrafusal fibers. These fibers are specialized muscle fibers inside the muscle spindle that respond to stretch and send information via sensory neurons to the central nervous system.
Step 3: Identify what happens when the sensory neuron is stimulated. When the intrafusal fibers are stretched, the sensory neuron increases its firing rate, sending signals to the spinal cord.
Step 4: Connect sensory neuron stimulation to the reflex arc. The sensory input activates alpha motor neurons that innervate the extrafusal muscle fibers, causing them to contract.
Step 5: Conclude the effect on muscle tone. This reflex contraction increases muscle tone, which is the muscle's resistance to passive stretch, helping maintain posture and muscle readiness.

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Key Concepts

Here are the essential concepts you must grasp in order to answer the question correctly.

Intrafusal Muscle Fibers

Intrafusal muscle fibers are specialized muscle fibers located within muscle spindles that detect changes in muscle length. They play a key role in proprioception by sensing stretch and relaying this information to the central nervous system to help regulate muscle activity.
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Sensory Neurons Innervating Intrafusal Fibers

Sensory neurons, particularly type Ia and II afferents, innervate intrafusal fibers and transmit information about muscle stretch to the spinal cord. Their stimulation signals changes in muscle length, which is essential for initiating reflexes that adjust muscle contraction and maintain posture.
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Muscle Tone and Reflex Regulation

Muscle tone refers to the continuous, passive partial contraction of muscles, maintained by reflex arcs involving sensory input from muscle spindles. Stimulation of sensory neurons from intrafusal fibers triggers reflexive activation of alpha motor neurons, increasing muscle contraction and thus enhancing muscle tone.
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