Quiz 5 Nervous System pt 1 Flashcards

1
Q

Central Nervous System involves the:

A

Brain

Spinal Cord

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2
Q

Peripheral Nervous System involves the:

A

Nerves

  • Afferent Neurons
  • Efferent Neurons
  • Sympathetic Autonomic Control
  • Parasympathetic Autonomic Control
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3
Q

Afferent Neurons

A

sensory neurons

  • sense stimulus and send info about the stimulus to CNS e.g. smell, light
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4
Q

Efferent Neurons

A

motor neurons

  • carry signals away from CNS, initiating action
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5
Q

Somatic Motor Neurons

(Efferent Neurons)

A

skeletal muscle

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6
Q

Autonomic Motor Neurons

(Efferent Neurons)

A

cardiac muscle (heart), glands, smooth muscles in the body; “hollow tubes”

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7
Q

Sympathetic Nervous System

(Autonomic Motor Neurons)

A

FIGHT OR FLIGHT

e.g. blood pressure, sweat, digestion stops

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8
Q

Parasympathetic Nervous System

(Autonomic Motor Neurons)

A

REST OR DIGEST

  • counteracts effects of sympathetic nervous system (starts digestion again, lowers BP)
  • optimal level of functioning exists in the parasympathetic nervous system
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9
Q

Enteric Nervous System

A

bowels, small intestine

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10
Q

Neuron

A
  • is a nerve cell, fully differentiated, and capable of transmitting a nervous (electrical) impulse
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11
Q

Nervous Tissue

A
  • composed of neurons
  • therefore our brain, spinal cord, and nerves are all cariations of neuronal arrangement
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12
Q

3 basic structures of a neuron

A

Cell Body (Soma): interpretation and protein synthesis; also contains nucleus

Dendrites: branched projections acting to propogate electrochemical stimulation received from other neural cells to the cell body (soma).

Axon: conducts/transmits electrical impulses away from the soma to different neurons, glands, or muscles; “nerve fibers”

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13
Q

White Matter/Grey Matter

A

White Matter: myelinated axon

Grey matter: unmyelinated axon, dendrite, or soma

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14
Q

Neurons and signal direction

A

A neuron is only capable of carrying a signal in one direction along its axon, thus the distinction between sensory and motor neurons.

(A bundle of axons w/in CNS is referred to as a tract; a bundle of axons outside the CNS is referred to as a nerve)

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15
Q

Synapse

A
  • the junction between the axon terminal and there the axons lead (muscle, other neuron, gland)
  • transmission of a signal across the synapse may be electric, but is more commonly chemical (involving a neurotransmitter)
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16
Q

Neuronal Membrane

(Channels and Pumps)

A

the membrane of a neuron is impermeable to most ions such as Na+, K+, Cl-, and Ca+, however, many distint channels and gates exist for their passage, but most notably:

Voltage Gated Channels: “Na+ stay high, K+ stay low”?

Na/K ATPase Pump: re-establish resting membrane (push Na+ out, K+ in)

Slow leak ion channels: K+ leaks out slowly (but faster than Na+)– creates + outside and - inside

17
Q

Resting Membrane Potential

A

A membrane at rest has a higher concentration of sodium on the outside and potassium on the inside of the cell. Potassium slowly leaks out creating a negative charge on the inside of the resting membrane; measured in millivolts

18
Q

Action Potential

A
  • a rapid change in membrane potential and is the mechanism by which a nerve signal is transmitted
  • muscle cells, cardiac cells, and neural cells all support an action potential though slight variations exist among the differing tissue types
  • the ability to support an action potential is characterized by the term ‘excitable’ tissue

RESTING STAGE

DEPOLARIZATION STAGE (Na+ channels open, flooding inside the cell)

REPOLARIZATION STAGE (K+ channels open, flood out of the cell) ATP pump kicks in?

19
Q

Saltatory Conduction

A
  • occurs along the myelinated axons allowing for a more rapid and energy conserving signal transmission
  • able to “skip” all the gates… jumps from one node to the next
20
Q

Neurotransmitters

A
  • are chemicals released into the synapse once an action potential reaches the end of the axon
  • its release is calcium dependent, and its action is determined by the postsynaptic receptor
  • the resulting action may last milliseconds or days and include:

– opening or closing of membrane channels

– enzyme activation on the postsynaptic structure

– altered cell metabolism

– altered gene expression

21
Q

Two Major classes of neurotransmitters exist:

A

Large molecule NT: neuropeptides/neurohormones

- insulin, growth hormone, prolactin, melanocyte stimulating hormone

Small molecule NT: have a more rapid and shorter duration of action

  • dopamine, seratonin, histamine, acetylcholine, norepinephrine
22
Q

The obvious variable in a neuron’s ability to carry a signal is:

Alterations in Neuronal Transmission

A

Ion concentration

  • neurotransmitter deficiencies, demyelination, damage to the neuron
23
Q

Alterations in Neuronal Transmission cont…

A
  • neuroregeneration* is possible through axonal regrowth assuming the cell body of that neuron is in tact
  • also, extracellular changes of endogenous and exogenous matter must be considered with respect to ingestion, metabolism, and excretion ability
    (e. g. a drop in extracellular pH will result in increased excitability of a neuron while a rise in pH will result in the opposite effect)
  • Low oxygen levels may decrease synaptic activity
24
Q

Alterations in Neuronal Transmission Cont

(synaptic fatigue and synaptic facilitation)

A

Synaptic Fatigue: ​occurs if stimulation is too rapidly repeated

Synaptic Facilitation: occurs if repetitive stimulation is followed by a brief period of rest, then re-stimulation

25
Q

Ganglia

A
  • masses of soma and dendrites in a close proximity; “clusters of cell bodies” (the term plexus is used to describe groupings of various ganglia)
26
Q

Two Ganglia of note:

A

Dorsal Root Ganglia (spinal ganglia) of the sensory neurons

Autonomic Ganglia of the autonomic motor neurons

  • sympathetic ganglia are paraspinal
  • parasympathetic ganglia are close to their effector organ
  • Somatic motor neuron cell bodies are located within the spinal cord at various levels, thus no ganglia