Week 3 Nervous System Flashcards

1
Q

what are the functions of glia cells

A

support, nurture and protect cells

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2
Q

What is the myelin sheath made by

A

schwann cells - PNS

oligodenrocytes - CNS

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3
Q

what are the steps of synaptic transmission?

A

Ambulances can’t vape nervous babies

  1. action potential arrives at the pre-synaptic terminal.
  2. voltage-gated Ca+ ions open and calcium enters the terminal
  3. vesicles merge with the membrane of the presynaptic membrane
  4. The neurotransmitters are released by exocytosis and diffuse across the synaptic cleft.
  5. The neurotransmitters bind to the receptors on the post synaptic membrane.
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4
Q

What happens to the left over neurotransmitters

A
  • destroyed by enzymes
  • re-uptake into presynaptic cleft.
  • diffuse into presynaptic cleft.
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5
Q

What are the stages of an action potential

A

Depolarisation - voltage gated sodium channels open and sodium ions enter the cell. Resulting in the cell becoming more negative.

Repolarisation - voltage gated sodium channel closes and potassium channel opens, letting potassium move out of the cell. cell becomes more negative.

Hyperpolarisation - voltage gated potassium channels is slow to close which results in an efflux of potassium leaving the cell.

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6
Q

What are the two types of neurotransmitters to know

A

Achetycholine

Adrenaline

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7
Q

What does the CNS and PNS contain?

A

CNS - Brain and spinal cord
PNS - all neural tissue outside of the CNS

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8
Q

What does efferent and afferent mean

A

efferent (motor) - impulses transmit from the CNS to the PNS (muscles and glands)

afferent (sensory) - transmits impulses from the PNS (muscles and glands) to the CNS.

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9
Q

What does sensory and motor system do.

A

sensory - receives information from the environment and body.

motor - sends information from the CNS to muscles and glands.

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10
Q

What are the lobes of the brain?

A

Frontal
Parietal
temporal
Occipital

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11
Q

What is the role of the sodium potassium pump

A

Moves the sodium ions into the cell whilst simultaneously moving potassium ions out of the cell.

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12
Q

what is the corpus callosum

A

the main connection between the two cerebral hemispheres

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13
Q

where is the primary motor cortex found?

A

frontal lobe

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14
Q

where is the primary somatosensory cortex

A

parietal lobe

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15
Q

what are the functions of the temporal lobe

A

auditory cortex and sensory speech centre

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16
Q

what is the difference between one and two neuron pathway

A

one neuron pathway - from neuron to effector muscle.

two neuron - one neuron to another neuron

17
Q

The period during an action potential when potassium ions leave the axon is known as

A

repolarisation

18
Q

Neurotransmitters ready for release are stored in

A

presynaptic vesicles

19
Q

where is grey and white matter located on the spinal cord

A

inside - grey matter
outside - white matter

20
Q

What does grey and white matter contain

A

grey matter - cell bodies

white matter - myelinated fibres

21
Q

what is grey and white matter located on the brain

A

inside - white matter
outside - grey matter

22
Q

what are dorsal and ventral roots

A

where the spinal nerves are attached to the spinal cord.

23
Q

What is the efferent division of the PNS.

A

somamotor - voluntary movements (one neuron pathway.

Autonomic - autonomic functions (two neuron pathway)

24
Q

What is the pathway of the somatomotor system

A

Motor neuron > skeletal muscles > (mainly) voluntary movement

25
Q

What are the two divisions of the autonomic nervous system

A

sympathetic

parasympathetic

26
Q

what neuron pathway is the autonomic nervous system

A

two neuron pathway

27
Q

What do the neurons come from autonomic nervous system (2 neruon pathway)

A

1st neuron - CNS to a ganglion

2nd - from a ganglion to the effector organ/cell.

28
Q

What is the neurotransmitters involved in the autonomic nervous system

A

achetlycoline

29
Q

what is affected in the parasympathetic nervous system

A

Heart

Smooth muscles

Glands

30
Q

which neurotransmitters and hormones are involved in the sympathetic nervous system.

A

achetlycoline

noradrenaline

31
Q

what receptors does noradrenaline act on

A

adrenergic receptors

32
Q

What is the adrenal medulla

A

part of the adrenal gland which is involved in the sympathetic nervous system.

33
Q

what does the adrenal medulla release

A

adrenaline and noradrenaline

34
Q

List the location of the ganglion in the sympathetic NS

A

ganglia close to the CNS

short fibres on the pre-ganglion

long fibres on the post-ganglion

35
Q

List the location of the ganglion in the parasympathetic NS

A

ganglia far from the CNS

long fibres on the pre- ganglion

short fibres on the post-ganglion

36
Q

Where do the sympathetic nerves originate from

A

thoracolumbar origin

37
Q

Where do the parasympathetic nerves originate from

A

carniosacral origin

38
Q

what is the function of the occipital lobe

A

primary visual cortex

39
Q
A