8 - ACTION POTENTIALS IN MYELINATED NEURONES Flashcards

1
Q

Which neurones are said to be myelinated?

A

The neurones which have a myelin sheath.

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2
Q

What is the myelin sheath?

A

An electrical insulator

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3
Q

What is made of?

A

A type of cell called a Schwann cell.

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4
Q

What is between the Schwann cells?

A

Tiny patches of bare membrane called the node of Ranvier.

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5
Q

What is concentrated at these nodes?

A

Sodium ion channels.

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6
Q

Where does depolarisation happen in a myelinated neurone?

A

At the nodes of Ranvier where sodium ions can get through the membrane.

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7
Q

What does the neurone’s cytoplasm do?

A

It conducts enough electrical charge.

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8
Q

To do what?

A

to depolarise the next node, so the impulse jumps from node to node, and this process is called salutatory conduction.

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9
Q

How does the impulse travel in a non-myelinated neurone?

A

As as wave along the whole length of the axon membrane

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10
Q

What does this mean in terms of the salutatory conduction?

A

It means that it is slower than the myelinated neurones

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