skin sensation
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: 1. A tactile perception or feeling experienced on the skin's surface: A "skin sensation" is a conscious experience resulting from the stimulation of sensory receptors in the skin. It refers to the feeling itself, such as warmth, pressure, or tingling, not the physical stimulus causing it.
Usage
This term is used to describe the subjective experience of touch, temperature, or pain perceived through the skin. It is often discussed in medical, psychological, and sensory contexts. - The patient reported an unusual skin sensation of pins and needles in her fingertips. - Different textures create distinct skin sensations when touched. - The primary function of the somatosensory cortex is to process skin sensations.
Advanced Usage
- Abnormal skin sensation: Often used in clinical settings to describe symptoms like paresthesia (e.g., numbness, tingling) or dysesthesia (e.g., burning, itching without a visible cause).
- Persistent abnormal skin sensations can be a sign of nerve damage.
Variants and Related Words
- Tactile sensation: A more formal synonym often used interchangeably with "skin sensation," emphasizing the sense of touch.
- Cutaneous sensation: A technical, anatomical term meaning precisely the same as "skin sensation" ( is Latin for skin).
- Feeling: A more general, common-language term that can encompass skin sensations as well as emotions.
- Somesthesia: The broader medical term for bodily sensation, which includes skin sensation, proprioception, and visceral sensation.
Synonyms
- Touch sensation
- Tactile perception
- Cutaneous feeling
Related Phrases
- Loss of skin sensation: Refers to anesthesia or numbness, the absence of feeling.
- The local anesthetic caused a complete loss of skin sensation in the area.
- Altered skin sensation: A general term for any change from normal feeling, including heightened sensitivity (hyperesthesia) or reduced sensitivity (hypoesthesia).
Noun
- a sensation localized on the skin