510 likes | 1.11k Views
Nervous System Communication. Kid Concussions In The News. Neurons . Nerve cells Parts of neurons Cell body Long extensions (fibers=dendrites or axons) Message = nerve impulse. Animal Nervous Systems. Sponges – no nervous system Other animals all have neurons in systems. Nerve Net.
E N D
Neurons • Nerve cells • Parts of neurons • Cell body • Long extensions (fibers=dendrites or axons) • Message = nerve impulse
Animal Nervous Systems • Sponges – no nervous system • Other animals all have neurons in systems
Nerve Net • In all cnidarians • Interconnected nerve cells • No brain
Ringlike Nervous System • In echinoderms • Ring with 5 radiating nerves
Ladderlike Nervous System • In many Platyhelminthes • Some have distinct brain (ganglia)
Annelid Nervous System • Segmental ganglia • Ganglia = aggregations of nervous tissue • Ventral nerve cord & brain Arthropod Mollusks(depends level of activity) some have giant fibers
Vertebrate Nervous System • Central nervous system • Brain & spinal cord • Peripheral nervous system • Nerves to & from CNS
Nerve Cells(Neurons) • Cell body • Contains nucleus and organelles • Produces substances necessary for cell to live & function • Axon (conducts or passes on impulse) • Long cell extension • May have myelin covering • Dendrites (receive impulse) • Usually short cell extensions • No myelin covering • most neurons have multiple dendrites
Sensory Neurons • Receive information from sense organ receptors • Transmit to the central nervous system • Cell bodies of sensory neurons lie near the CNS
Motor Neurons • Transmit commands away from CNS to effector (muscle or gland) • Each neuron has one long axon • Cell bodies on most motor neurons lie in or near CNS
Interneurons • Located within brain & spinal cord • Integrate information • Axons may or may not be myelinated • usually axons are shorter than those in PNS
Neuroglia • Nerve support cells • Provide support, protection, & nutritional stability • Schwann cells (special neuroglial cells) • Found around axons • Produce myelin sheath • Oligodendrocytes – produce myelin sheath around some CNS axons
Myelin Sheath • Insulates axon • Nodes of Ranvier-allows impulse to move at a greater speed along axon • Uninsulated areas- no myelin sheath
Nerve Impulses • Electrical signals transmitted along membranes of nerves
Resting Potential • Neuron is electrically charged at rest • Outside is positively charged • Inside is negatively charged
Sodium-Potassium Pump • Proteins embedded within cell membrane • Moves sodium to the outside • Moves potassium to the inside • Maintains resting potential • Requires energy (ATP)
Action Potential • Nerve impulse is started by a stimulus • Stimuli cause movements of ions through membrane • Threshold potential • Sufficient stimulation to depolarize membrane • Action potential • Rapid reversal of membrane electric potential
Nerve Transmission • Action potential at one point depolarizes next area • Depolarization moves in self-propagating wave
Saltatory Conduction • Nerve impulse jumps & moves faster along myelinated axon
Synapse • Area where nerve communicates • Transfers message • Another neuron • An effector
Synaptic Cleft • Neurons do not touch other neurons or effector cells • Nerve impulse must cross gap (electrical signal is changed to a chemical signal)
Neurotransmitters • Organic molecules (> 60 different chemicals) • Transfer message across synaptic cleft • Attach to receptors on target cell
Neuromuscular Junctions • Synapse between neuron & skeletal muscle • Neurotransmitter is aceytylcholine
Neuron to Neuron Connections • Uses many different neurotransmitters (such as dopamine, norepinephrine, serotonin) • Some cause different effects • Excitatory synapse – continuation of impulse • Inhibitory synapse – reduce ability to depolarize
Integration of Nerve Impulses • Summed impulses determine if postsynaptic neuron will depolarize
Human Nervous System • Central nervous system • Brain • Spinal cord • Peripheral nervous system • Brings messages to & from CNS • Somatic nervous system – voluntary • Autonomic nervous system - involuntary
Central Nervous System • Integrates sensory & motor impulses
Spinal Cord • Connects peripheral nervous system with brain • Receives information via spinal nerves • Includes reflex arcs
CNS Protection - Meninges • Layers of membranes • Dura mater • Arachnoid • Pia mater
Peripheral Nervous System • Sensory & motor impulses • Cranial nerves communicate directly with brain, some are strictly sensory or motor, some are mixed.
Spinal Nerves • Sensory & motor nerve fibers • 31 pairs and all are mixed nerves • Travel directly to spinal cord • Nerves are bundled to form mixed nerves
Motor Neuron Systems • Somatic nervous system, part of PNS • Voluntary • Movements of skeletal muscles • requires a single motor neuron • Reflex = automatic response to nerve stimulation • Autonomic nervous system, part of PNS • Involuntary motor pathways • requires two motor neurons
Divisions of the Autonomic Nervous System • Parasympathetic • Acetylcholine is the neurotransmitter • Prevails during periods of inactivity • Housekeeping • Sympathetic • Norepinephrine is the neurotransmitter • “fight or flight” • Responds to stress • Prepares body for action • Parasympathetic & sympathetic together help to maintain homeostasis
Psychoactive Drugs • Affect action of neurotransmitters In specific parts of the brain • Some are abused
Drug Addiction • Chronic use (or abuse) of psychoactive drugs • Person becomes physically dependant • Drug use tends to increase due to drug tolerance