Submitted by Hola3008 t3_1238mmm in askscience
itssallgoodman t1_jdu6k70 wrote
It’s my understanding it’s due to the anatomy of a peripheral nerve. To keep this simple, the anatomy of sensory v motor fibers are akin to a coaxial cable. The sensory fibers are the outside of the nerve(insulative portion of the cable) and the motor fibers are the inside(copper wire).
Thus when compressing the nerve the outer layers are effected first and the inner fibers require more compression and time to be effected compared to the outer. This leads to sensory deficits superseding motor deficits.
ImprovedPersonality t1_jdul27t wrote
That's also the way my anesthesiologist explained it to me for an arm surgery. They used a nerve block to make my arm go numb.
uh-okay-I-guess t1_jdvc1ps wrote
> The sensory fibers are the outside of the nerve(insulative portion of the cable) and the motor fibers are the inside(copper wire).
Can you cite a source to support this? I can't find one, and I did find a paper where they attempted to image the fibers (https://translational-medicine.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12967-021-02871-w). Their images seem to me to show them all mixed together.
[deleted] t1_jdua2iv wrote
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