КОМЕНТАРІ •

  • @kentshelton7072
    @kentshelton7072 3 роки тому

    This is excellent content! I am in the athletic training field, learned about a man who trains his athletes to stimulate these systems within his training program. He will do eye saccades before bench press, etc. I found your page when looking for visual exercise stimulants.
    I would love to learn more about the interplay of these systems involved with movement and posture, if you have research, books, article recommendations or anything at all, that would be awesome. Can't wait for more videos

    • @functionalneurohealth5468
      @functionalneurohealth5468 2 роки тому

      Hi Kent, there are many bookls and education systems that explain the mechanisms behind these concepts. Z Health is great starting point system and there education is top notch.

  • @RoryAbcoe
    @RoryAbcoe 2 роки тому

    I think the distinction between mechanoreceptors and interoceptors is a bit confusing, as interoceptors also include mechanoreceptors no?

    • @RoryAbcoe
      @RoryAbcoe 2 роки тому

      Great video though thank you!

    • @functionalneurohealth5468
      @functionalneurohealth5468 2 роки тому

      Hi Rory, there should be no confusion between mecahnoreceptors and interoceptors. Mechanoreceptors relate to movement functions and they are embedded within muscles, joints, tendons, ligaments and fascia. Around 20% of sensory infromation going to the brain is from the Mechanoreceptive system. The other 80% is coming from the Interoceptive system which runs everywhere throughout the inside and outside of the body, and includes nociceptors, which run everywhere in the body but do not report on movement. Does Interoception effect movement, yes, but it does not "report" on it. In a hierachy, Interoception is percived as much more important to the brain as it reports on tissue states, levels of threat, blood pressure, heart rate, breath rate, organ homeostasis and much more. Hope that makes sense?

    • @RoryAbcoe
      @RoryAbcoe 2 роки тому

      @@functionalneurohealth5468 Thank you for the reply. As I understand it some nociceptors are mechanoreceptors, is this a misunderstanding? Thanks!

    • @functionalneurohealth5468
      @functionalneurohealth5468 2 роки тому

      @@RoryAbcoe technically, in Functional Neurology understanding and knowledge, they are classed separately. The reason being is they actually behave quite differently in terms on stimulation, the pathwyas they travel and their muscle inhibition patterns. What is also true however is that Nociceptors can be mechaniclly stretched or compressed though that doesn't classify them as Nociceptors. It all comes down to the particular pathways they travel. Mechanoreceptors travel up the DCML or Spinocerebellar tracts and Nociceptors travel the Spinothalamic tracts.

    • @RoryAbcoe
      @RoryAbcoe 2 роки тому

      @@functionalneurohealth5468 Thank you for your response that clarifies things! looking forward to more videos like this