Blood Vessels And Nerves Flashcards

1
Q

General structure

A
  1. Endothelium on a basement membrane
  2. Intima
  3. Internal elastic lamina
  4. Media
  5. External elastic lamina
  6. Adventitia
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2
Q

Loose connective tissue layers

A

Intima and adventitia

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3
Q

Thick connective tissue layer

A

Media- comprising smooth muscle with some fibroblasts and varying amounts of collagen and elastin

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4
Q

Elastic arteries

A

arteries near the heart eg. Aorta, pulmonary arteries
• media contains abundant concentric sheets of elastin
• Elastic recoil helps to smooth pressure surges from the heart and drives blood around the coronary circulation during diastole
• Have a blood supply of their own (vasa vasorum)

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5
Q

Muscular arteries

A

most arteries are muscular arteries
• media comprises of layers of smooth muscle and little elastin
• eg radial artery, splenic artery

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6
Q

Arterioles

A

resistance vessels
• arbitrarily defined as having 3 or fever muscle layers in the media
• up to 100um diameter
• elastic laminae poorly defined

Can be closed due completely due to contraction of smooth muscle

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7
Q

Criteria for an arteriole

A

3 or fewer muscle layers in the media
• up to 100um diameter

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8
Q

Capillaries

A

no adventitia, external elastic lamina, media, internal elastic lamina, intima
• only a layer of vascular endothelial cells resting on a basement membrane
• pericyte- layer of cells present on outside of capillary. Becomes continuous as capillary becomes larger. Cells that constrict or relax to regulate size of capillaries
• fenestrated capillaries- endothelial layer is incomplete forming pores that facilitate movement of materials into surrounding tissues eg kidney, liver
• Closed capillary substances are transported across membrane by diffusion or pinocytosis

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9
Q

What are fenestrated capillaries

A

endothelial layer is incomplete forming pores that facilitate movement of materials into surrounding tissues eg kidney, liver

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10
Q

Sinusoids

A

large diameter, thin walled vessels with a fenestrated endothelium. They have poorly developed basement membrane but are supported by surrounding tissues eg liver and spleen

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11
Q

Does all blood pass through capillaries

A

Not all blood passes through capillaries. Lots of arterio-venous shunts that allow some blood to pass directly from arteriole to venule. Most organs can control their perfusion

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12
Q

Venules

A

associated with arterioles
• Have valves
• Thin walled
No external elastic lamina
• Contractile pericytes wrap around outside of endothelial cells and form a complete layer as venules get larger
• pericytes replaced by smooth muscles as venues become veins

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13
Q

Veins

A

• no external elastic lamina
• thinner muscular wall (media) and larger lumen
• Have valves
• Smooth muscles in wall may be circular or longitudinal

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14
Q

Lymphatics

A

thin walled (similar to capillaries and veins)
• have valves
• do not contain blood - contain eosinophilic lymph and may contain lymphocytes (stains pink)
• wall of the lymph capillary is composed of endothelium in which the simple squamous cells overlap to form a simple one-way valve

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15
Q

Peripheral nerves

A

composed of neurons: consist of a cell body (often found in a ganglion) and long axons

Unipolar - 1 process
Pseudo-unipolar - apparently 1 process
Bipolar - 2 processes
Multipolar - more than 2 processes

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16
Q

Endoneurium

A

Present between individual axons

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17
Q

Perineurium

A

surrounds the groups of axons to form fascicles

18
Q

Epineurium

A

binds fascicles together to form nerve fibres

19
Q

Where are cell bodies of motor neurons

A

Grey matter of spinal cord

20
Q

Where are cell bodies of sensory neurones

A

Dorsal root ganglion

21
Q

Where are cell bodies of sympathetic neurons

A

Grey matter of spinal cord and adjacent sympathetic ganglia

22
Q

Where are cell bodies of parasympathetic neurons

A

Brain and local ganglia

23
Q

Nerve cell fibrous proteins

A

Microtubules- assemblies of tubulin and dynein. Transport vesicles from Golgi body in neuron cell body to end and back of axon. involved in forward (anterograde) and backward (retrograde) movement of organelles and substances along axons
Neurofilaments- determination of axon diameter

24
Q

Nissl substance

A

rER. Well-developed in neurons as have a large surface area (cell membrane) and large number of vesicles whose neurosecretions are discharged from the cells

25
Q

Mesoaxon

A

point where the 2 limbs of the Schwann cell or oligodendrocyte that engulf the axon fuse. It is the focal point where myelin is inserted into the myelin sheath

26
Q

Satellite cells

A

surround nerve cell bodies and play a supportive role, plying the nerves with nutrients, growth factors etc

27
Q

Neurosectretory granules

A

found at neuro-chemical synapse:
• two most common types: cholinergic (release acetylcholine) and adrenergic (nor-adrenaline)

28
Q

Myelin

A

• insulates axons
• a spiral of apposed Schwann cell membranes
• one axon per Schwann Cell, multiple Schwann cells per myelinated axon
• gaps between Schwann cells = Nodes of Ranvier- depolarisation occurs at these points and action potential passes from one node to the next in a saltatory fashion
• Myelinated axons are larger and transmit faster impulses than unmyelinated ones- faster conduction velocity 10-100ms compared to 1-20m/s
• Most of myelin is extracted by conventional tissue processing leaving clear spaces or causing collapse within the nerves

29
Q

Myelin structure

A

Myelin is membranous in nature and consists of a bilipid layer with proteins inserted into it and spanning the layers. Sphingomyelin is the predominant phospholipid. Number of proteins and lipoproteins including proteolipid proteins, myelin basic protein, PO protein and peripheral myelin protein

30
Q

Schwann cells

A

supported by continuous chain of Schwann cells (200um long)- myelinated (one Schwann cell per axon) and unmyelinated (multiple axons per Schwann cell)

31
Q

Neuromelanin

A

found in large quantities in neurons if substantia nigra (region of brain containing dopamine)

32
Q

Lipofuscin granules

A

breakdown products that are not fully digested and accumulate within the perikaryon of sympathetic ganglia cells

33
Q

CNS

A

brain and spinal cord and contains most of the cell bodies. Supporting cells = oligodendrocytes

34
Q

PNS

A

consist of mainly axons processes passing to target organs and tissues. Supporting cells = Schwann cells

35
Q

Axon hillock

A

contains vesicles drives from the Golgi body, site of origin of nerve stimulus. Seen as a pale zone in the perikaryon (cytoplasm surrounding nucleus) at entry to axon

36
Q

Can a severed nerve regenerate

A

If the cell body survives, a nerve fibre can regenerate but never quite as good. Can grow at 1-2cm per week

37
Q

What is the predominant myelin membrane phospholipid

A

Sphingomyelin

38
Q

Cell bodies: motor neurons

A

Grey matter of spinal cord

39
Q

Cell bodies: sensory neurons

A

Dorsal root ganglion

40
Q

Cell bodies: sympathetic neurons

A

Grey matter of spinal cord and adjacent sympathetic ganglia

41
Q

Cell bodies: parasympathetic neurons

A

Brain and local ganglia