Functional Diagnosis; the Application of Physiology to Diagnosis
The book Functional Diagnosis; the Application of Physiology to Diagnosis was written by author Thomas George Atkinson Here you can read free online of Functional Diagnosis; the Application of Physiology to Diagnosis book, rate and share your impressions in comments. If you don't know what to write, just answer the question: Why is Functional Diagnosis; the Application of Physiology to Diagnosis a good or bad book?
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Indeed very few do so. The great majority of them penetrate the gray matter of the cord and transmit their impulses to tract cells, whose axons pass up the lateral tracts (Flechsig and Gowers) , or simply pass over to other parts of the cord, or communicate with an anterior motor neuron, forming a reflex arc. Of those fibres which do pass up the posterior col- umns, some continue to the medulla; others often passing upward for a short distance branch off and terminate in the tract of Flechsig. ...At these respect- ive terminations they transmit their impulse to new neurons, which carry them to the brain. Muscle Sense. — Experiment and observation show that the posterior and lateral tracts do not play any important part in the transmission of ordinary sen- 146 FUNCTIONAL DIAGNOSIS sory impulses (touch, pressure, etc.), but conduct principally impulses of muscle sense, or those im- pulses which acquaint us with the position and de- gree of contraction of our muscles. The great bulk of these impulses are conveyed to the cerebellum, which is the chief functionating center for co-ordi- nation.
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