Group A nerve fiber


Group A nerve fibers are one of the three classes of nerve fiber as generally classified by Erlanger and Gasser. The other two classes are the group B nerve fibers, and the group C nerve fibers. Group A are heavily myelinated, group B are moderately myelinated, and group C are unmyelinated.
The other classification is a sensory grouping that uses the terms type Ia and type Ib, type II, type III, and type IV, sensory fibers.

Types

There are four subdivisions of group A nerve fibers: alpha, beta, gamma, and delta. These subdivisions have different amounts of myelination and axon thickness and therefore transmit signals at different speeds. Larger diameter axons and more myelin insulation lead to faster signal propagation.
Group A nerves are found in both motor and sensory pathways.
TypeErlanger-Gasser
Classification
DiameterMyelinConduction velocityAssociated muscle fibers
α13–20 μmYes80–120 m/sExtrafusal muscle fibers
γ5–8 μmYes4–24 m/sIntrafusal muscle fibers

Different sensory receptors are innervated by different types of nerve fibers. Proprioceptors are innervated by type Ia, Ib and II sensory fibers, mechanoreceptors by type II and III sensory fibers, and nociceptors and thermoreceptors by type III and IV sensory fibers.
TypeErlanger-Gasser
Classification
DiameterMyelinConduction velocityAssociated sensory receptors
Ia13–20 μmYes80–120 m/sResponsible for proprioception
Ib13–20 μmYes80–120 m/sGolgi tendon organ
II6–12 μmYes33–75 m/sSecondary receptors of muscle spindle
All cutaneous mechanoreceptors
Some Nociceptors
III1–5 μmThin3–30 m/sFree nerve endings of touch and pressure
Nociceptors of neospinothalamic tract
Cold thermoreceptors
IVC0.2–1.5 μmNo0.5–2.0 m/sNociceptors of paleospinothalamic tract
Warmth receptors

Type Aɑ fibers include the type Ia and type Ib sensory fibers of the alternative classification system, and are the fibers from muscle spindle endings and the Golgi tendon, respectively.
Type Aβ fibres, and type Aɣ, are the type II afferent fibers from stretch receptors. Type Aβ fibres from the skin are mostly dedicated to touch. However a small fraction of these fast fibres also transmit pain
Type Aδ fibers are the afferent fibers of nociceptors. Aδ fibers carry information from peripheral mechanoreceptors and thermoreceptors to the dorsal horn of the spinal cord. This pathway describes the first-order neuron. Aδ fibers serve to receive and transmit information primarily relating to acute pain. This type of pain can result from several classifications of stimulants: temperature-induced, mechanical, and chemical. This can be part of a withdrawal reflex - initiated by the Aδ fibers in the reflex arc of activating withdrawal responses. These are the type III group. Aδ fibers carry cold, pressure, and acute pain signals, and because they are thin and myelinated, they send impulses faster than unmyelinated C fibers, but more slowly than other, more thickly myelinated group A nerve fibers. Their conduction velocities are moderate.
Their cell bodies are located in the dorsal root ganglia and axons are sent to the periphery to innervate target organs and are also sent through the dorsal roots to the spinal cord. Within the spinal cord the axons reach the posterior grey column and terminate in Rexed laminae I to V.