Tonic (physiology): Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 02:33, 18 March 2025
Tonic in physiology refers to a physiological response which is slow, and may be graded. This term is typically used in opposition to a fast response. For instance, tonic muscles are contrasted by the more typical and much faster twitch muscles, while tonic sensory nerve endings are contrasted to the much faster phasic sensory nerve endings.
Tonic muscles
Tonic muscles are much slower than twitch fibers in terms of time from stimulus to full activation, time to full relaxation upon cessation of stimuli, and maximal shortening velocity.<ref name="Kardong">Kardong, K. 2008. Vertebrates: Comparative Anatomy, Function, Evolution. 5th edition. McGraw-Hill Science/Engineering/Math. ISBN 978-0-07-304058-5</ref> These muscles are rarely found in mammals (only in the muscles moving the eye and in the middle ear), but are common in reptiles and amphibians.<ref name="Kardong"/>
Tonic sensory receptors
Tonic sensory input adapts slowly to a stimulus<ref name = caspar>http://caspar.bgsu.edu/~courses/Glossary.htm</ref> and continues to produce action potentials over the duration of the stimulus.<ref name = mentor>mentor.lscf.ucsb.edu/course/fall/eemb157/lecture/Lectures%2016,%2017%2018.ppt</ref> In this way it conveys information about the duration of the stimulus. In contrast, phasic receptors adapt rapidly to a stimulus. The response of the cell diminishes very quickly and then stops.<ref name = caspar /> It does not provide information on the duration of the stimulus<ref name = mentor />; instead some of them convey information on rapid changes in stimulus intensity and rate.<ref name = frank>http://frank.mtsu.edu/~jshardo/bly2010/nervous/receptor.html</ref> An example of a phasic receptor is the Ruffini corpuscle.
See also
References
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