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			C Fibers are small, unmyelinated
                nerves with slow conduction velocities that carry
                dull, aching burning pain impulses. 
			Thinly myelinated A afferent
                fibers carry fast, sharp, shooting pain
                sensations and are most integral to the
                propagation of mechanical pressure stimuli from
                muscles, joints, and bone. 
			Compared with these fibers, C
                afferent fibers have a higher threshold for
                mechanical stimuli and a smaller field of
                reception. 
			Both these classes of nociceptive
                fibers ultimately synapse with neurons in the
                dorsal horn of the spinal cord.  courtesy of Roxane Pain Institute used
        with permission   |