Abstract

The skin is our largest sensory organ and innervated by afferent fibers carrying tactile information to the spinal cord and onto the brain. The density with which different classes of tactile afferents innervate the skin is not constant but varies considerably across different body regions. However, precise estimates of innervation density are only available for some body parts, such as the hands, and estimates of the total number of tactile afferent fibers are inconsistent and incomplete. Here we reconcile different estimates and provide plausible ranges and best estimates for the number of different tactile fiber types innervating different regions of the skin, using evidence from dorsal root fiber counts, microneurography, histology, and psychophysics. We estimate that the skin across the whole body of young adults is innervated by ∼230,000 tactile afferent fibers (plausible range: 200,000-270,000), with a subsequent decrement of 5-8% every decade due to aging. Fifteen percent of fibers innervate the palmar skin of both hands and 19% the region surrounding the face and lips. Slowly and fast-adapting fibers are split roughly evenly, but this breakdown varies with skin region. Innervation density correlates well with psychophysical spatial acuity across different body regions, and, additionally, on hairy skin, with hair follicle density. Innervation density is also weakly correlated with the size of the cortical somatotopic representation but cannot fully account for the magnification of the hands and the face.

Highlights

  • Sensory processing cannot be studied without understanding the nature of sensory inputs

  • Nineteen percent of tactile afferent fibers or around 3,230 fibers are classed as slowly adapting type II fibers (SAII)

  • We provide an overview of measurements from the literature and detail the calculations that led to the estimates of innervation density described in the previous sections

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Summary

Tactile innervation densities across the whole body

The density with which different classes of tactile afferents innervate the skin is not constant but varies considerably across different body regions. Precise estimates of innervation density are only available for some body parts, such as the hands, and estimates of the total number of tactile afferent fibers are inconsistent and incomplete. We reconcile different estimates and provide plausible ranges and best estimates for the number of different tactile fiber types innervating different regions of the skin, using evidence from dorsal root fiber counts, microneurography, histology, and psychophysics. We estimate that the skin across the whole body of young adults is innervated by 230,000 tactile afferent fibers (plausible range: 200,000–270,000), with a subsequent decrement of 5–8% every decade due to aging. Fifteen percent of fibers innervate the palmar skin of both hands and 19% the region surrounding the face and lips. Innervation density is weakly correlated with the size of the cortical somatotopic representation but cannot fully account for the magnification of the hands and the face

INTRODUCTION
TACTILE INNERVATION OF THE SKIN
Glabrous Skin of the Hand
Glabrous Skin of the Foot Sole
Hairy Skin
Whole Body
Innervation Density and Tactile Acuity
Innervation Density and the Cortical Homunculus
Back trunk
CALCULATIONS AND PRIOR RESULTS
Tactile Innervation over the Lifespan
Findings
Foot Sole
Full Text
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