Originally posted by Diane
Where can I find something "believable" that tells me that? So far as I can see by skimming and reading a little, that specific info is not in either of the Wall books (which arrived here yesterday from amazon.com)
nor in my physiology book.
Btw, when you say large myelinated ones are you talking about A-beta or A-delta?
When I think of what might produce that immediate, sickening ankle-twist pain I tend to think perisoteum (ok, i will consider skin ligaments too!) Periosteum has the highest innervation os mesodermal tissue doesn' it? What kind of fibers innervate it? By the way, in all honestly I don't know if I get that in "a fraction of a second" or a second and 1/2, but less than 15 seconds for sure, i think .
(Luke did you mean to say peritoneum or periosteum?, by the way)
Thanks for your patience.
Off topic (sort of) ~ How much education in the nervous system and pain does the average PT student get in PT School? ~ I'm partly just curious, partly wondering how comparatively tedious i may or may not be to have a discourse with

Dana
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