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The Spinal Cord and Peripheral Nerves

Posted by Bobby Brown on August 01, 2020 - 4:25pm

The Spinal Cord and Peripheral Nerves

Spinal nerves branch from the spinal cord, enabling the brain to communicate with the rest of the body. Watch our Cervical Nerve Anatomy Animation.

Thirty-one pairs of spinal nerves exit the spinal cord through openings between the vertebrae. The point at which a nerve exits the spinal cord is called a nerve root. The nerve root then branches out into many smaller peripheral nerves that control different parts of the body.

Damage to any part of the central nervous system or peripheral nerves can cause neuropathic pain.

 

A nerve that exits the lower back has peripheral branches that extend all the way down to the toes. Peripheral nerves comprise the peripheral nervous system. The peripheral nerves include both motor nerves and sensory nerves:

  • Sensory nerves are nerves that receive sensory stimuli, telling us how something feels—whether it is hot, cold, or painful. These nerves are made up of nerve fibers, called sensory fibers (mechanoreceptor fibers sense body movement and pressure against the body, and nociceptor fibers sense tissue injury).
  • Motor nerves lead to the muscles and stimulate movement. They are made up of nerve fibers called motor fibers.

Neuropathy may damage either the inner or outer part of the nerve cell. The axon is the inner information pathway of the nerve cell. Myelin—the fatty outer sheath—protects the nerve cell and assists in conveying information throughout the nervous system.

Symptoms of peripheral neuropathy generally appear first in the body’s longest nerves, initially affecting the feet, then the hands. Over time, the symptoms typically move up the arms and legs.

 

How Nerves Cause Pain

Spinal structures and nerves are in close proximity, creating the potential for irritation and pressure on the nerves. Many structures in the spine can cause back pain, such as when:

  • Large nerve roots that go to the legs and arms are irritated
  • Smaller nerves that innervate the spine are irritated

One common example of nerve pain occurs when a person has a lumbar herniated disc. The discs between the vertebrae can herniate and press against a nearby spinal nerve root. Leakage of the gel-like material inside the disc may also aggravate a nerve.

After the nerves are damaged and neuropathy develops, abnormal signals from the peripheral nervous system and the central nervous system prevent the pain from easing.

M H Thanks for this blog, polyneuropathy is very unpleasant devastating disease
August 1, 2020 at 5:25pm