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The Nervous System. 2 categories in nervous system. Central nervous system (CNS) – brain, spinal cord Peripheral nervous system (PNS) – nerves outside CNS. 2 divisions of PNS – somatic (voluntary), autonomic (involuntary). http://lumen.georgetown.edu/faculty/che3/bvl/images/nervous.jpg.
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2 categories in nervous system. • Central nervous system (CNS) – brain, spinal cord • Peripheral nervous system (PNS) – nerves outside CNS. • 2 divisions of PNS – somatic (voluntary), autonomic (involuntary)
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Autonomic divided into 2: 1sympathetic (during stress), 2parasympathetic (normal functioning)
Nerve Tissue • 2 types of cells: 1neurons (responsive cells that conduct impulses at fast speeds) 2neuroglia (support, maintain neurons)
5 types of neuroglia • 1astrocytes (anchor neurons) • 2ependymal (form cerebrospinal fluid) • 3microglia (eat invading microorganisms) • 4oligodendrocytes (provide insulation around CNS – myelin) • 5Schwann cells (insulation around PNS)
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Neuron made up of… • 1cell body (cytoplasm, nucleus, organelles) • 2dendrites (branching extensions from cell body – receive impulses) • 3axons (conducts impulse away from body)
Axons enclosed with Schwann cells forming layers rich in fat. • Provides insulation – myelin. • Insulation not continuous (gaps – nodes of Ranvier)
Gray matter is made of unmyelinated fibers – shorter with no myelin • White matter is made of myelinated fibers – can be longer and have myelin
Types of Neurons • Structurally, 3 different types. • 1Multipolar – many dendrites – carry impulses to skeletal muscle. • 2Bipolar – single dendrite, single axon – special sensory areas (ears, eyes) • 3Unipolar – one nerve fiber (from skin to spinal cord)
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Functionally, 3 different types of neurons. • 1Sensory (afferent) – carry from body to CNS) • 2Association (interneurons) – links between neurons • 3Motor (efferent) – from CNS to body
Impulse Transmission • Difference in voltage across cell membranes. • Openings in membrane are called ion channels. They regulate movement of ions. • Greatest influence – Na+, K+
Sodium-potassium pump – transports sodium out of cell, potassium inside. • Causes concentration gradient – ions actively move across cell membrane through ion channels • Every 3 Na+ pumped out, 2 K+ back in.
Outside of the membrane accumulates positive ions (potassium leaks out faster) • Resting membrane potential – no impulses are transmitted
Potential on inside -70 mV. • Change in membrane permeability to sodium – ions flow outward; inside becomes more positive – depolarization (+ 30 mV) • Restored to normal – repolarization – potassium inward through ion channels, sodium channels close.
Depolarization followed by repolarization – impulse sent down axon. • Nerve impulse – wave of ion reversals (changing charge of membrane)
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Myelinated fibers- Conduct impulses faster than nonmyelinated fibers • Node of Ranvier – gaps in axon of myelinated fibers • Impulse jumps across myelin sheath from node to node – fastest conduction in body.
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Types of Stimuli • All-or-none – either impulse conducted or not. • Threshold – minimum strength of stimulus needed for action potential. • Subthreshold – no action potential. • Series of subthreshold – summation (lead to action potential)
Gap between adjacent neurons - Synapse • Neuron that sends impulse – presynaptic neuron; recieves impulse – postsynaptic neruon • Axon of presynaptic – bulb with synaptic vescicles (contains neurotransmitters)
Synaptic Cleft – Small space between the terminal end of an axon and the next neuron or muscle.
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2 effects of neurotransmitters • 1Excitatory – increase membrane permeability to sodium ions (cause action potential) – accetylcholine, norepinephrine • 2Inhibitory – lowers chance of impulse crossing synapse – endorphins, GABA (inhibit pain)
Central Nervous System • 1Spinal cord – from base of brain to 1st, 2nd lumbar vertebrae. • Enters through foramen magnum of skull. • Protected by vertebral column, fluid, and meninges (layers of membrane)
Direction of Impulses • Ascending tract (up towards brain)– sensory information • Descending tract (away from brain)– motor information • Spinal cord also serves for reflexes – rapid response to emergency.
Reflex arc • Reflex arc- Receptor (generates action potential) sends message along sensory neuron to CNS (spinal cord). • Examples: Withdrawal reflex, patellar reflex, vomiting- smooth muscle reflex, heart rate- cardiac muscle reflex
The Brain • 3 major regions: 1forebrain, 2midbrain, 3hindbrain. • Forebrain – cerebrum, diencephalon • Midbrain – below diencephalon • Hindbrain – pons, medulla oblongata, cerebellum. • Brain stem – midbrain, pons, medulla
Cerebrum • Cerebrum – higher brain – conscious thought, memory, learning. • Divided into left and right cerebral hemispheres. • Wrinkled structure (convolutions) – result from rapid growth during development.
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Foldings project upward – gyri; downward – sulci. • Deep grove – fissure; 2 major ones – longitudinal (divides hemispheres), transverse (cerebrum from cerebellum)
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Peripheral Nervous System • Nerves, ganglia, sensory receptors. • Communication between CNS and other areas of body. • Nerve – composed of more than 1 type of tissue; responsible for transporting nerve impulses.
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Nerves with… • sensory fibers – afferent nerves • motor fibers – efferent nerves • both – mixed nerves • Ganglia – clusters of neurons outside CNS
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