human anatomy chapter 12

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______ is a typical resting membrane potential for a neuron. -30 millivolts -70 millivolts -100 millivolts +70 millivolts

-70 millivolts

There are ______ different types of glial cells in the CNS. 2 3 4

4

______ is responsiveness to a stimuli. Secretion Excitability Amiotic Conductivity

Excitability

Propagation of depolarization only flows away from the cell body towards the synaptic knob because ______. previous regions in the axon have only potassium channels previous regions in the axon have sodium channels in the inactive state previous regions of the axon are already repolarized

previous regions in the axon have sodium channels in the inactive state

Membrane molecules that use the energy of ATP to move ions against a concentration gradient are called ______

pumps

An axon is either incapable of generating an action potential or requires a larger than normal stimulus during the _______ period.

refractory

Dendrites are ______ than axons. shorter longer

shorter

The all-or-none law refers to the fact that action potentials will only occur if the initial segment reaches ______

threshold

The conductive segment of a neuron is/are the ______. axon hillock terminal branches total length of the axon

total length of the axon

In retrograde transport, substances are moved ______ the cell body. away from toward

toward

True or false: Voltage-gated sodium ion channels are closed initially and the membrane potential is -70 mv.

true

Most afferent neurons are classified functionally as ______. bipolar multipolar unipolar

unipolar

Initially, the voltage-gated Na+ channels are closed and the membrane potential is ______ mV. As Na+ flows in the membrane potential changes to ______ mV and the threshold is reached. -70; -90 -70; -55 -55; -70 -90; -70

-70; -55

If only K+ leak channels were present, the membrane potential would be ______. -75 mV -55 mV 0 mV -90 mV

-90 mV

______ is a type of membrane transport protein that increases the potential energy across a membrane. A ligand gated ion channel A leak channel A voltage gated ion channel A pump

A pump

Numerous ______ must be generated and arrive at the initial segment at nearly the same moment if a threshold is to be reached. IPSPs EPSPs

EPSPs

______ is what underlies the absolute refractory period. Inactivation of sodium channels Activation of potassium channel Inactivation of potassium channels Activation of sodium channels

Inactivation of sodium channels

Repolarization is due to the opening of voltage-gated _______ and the subsequent movement of _____ out of the cell. K+/Na+ Na+/Na+ Na+/K+ K+/K+

K+/K+

______ represents the smallest percentage of CNS glial cells. Oligodendrocytes Ependymal cells Astrocytes Microglia

Microglia

The threshold is reached when the ______ ions flow into the cell. Na+ K+ Ca++ Cl-

Na+

Which of the following pumps can you find in the plasma membrane? Multiple select question. Na+/K+ H+ Ca2+ Cl-

Na+/K+ Ca2+

Which of the following membrane transporters are present throughout the membrane of a neuron? voltage-gated sodium channels voltage-gated potassium channels Na+/K+ pumps potassium leak channels sodium leak channels

Na+/K+ pumps potassium leak channels sodium leak channels

The nerve impulse has the voltage-gated ______ channels opened first followed by the opening of the voltage-gated ______ channels. K+; Na+ K+; Cl- Na+; Cl- Na+; K+

Na+; K+

Action potentials are always propagated along an axon at the same ______ but ______ can vary depending on the strength of the stimulus. frequency; amplitude amplitude; frequency

amplitude; frequency

An epineurium surrounds ______. a nerve fascicle an individual axon an entire nerve

an entire nerve

The nerve impulse causes ______ in the number of calcium ions that enter the synaptic knob an increase a decrease

an increase

The endoneurium surrounds ______. an individual axon a nerve fascicle the entire nerve

an individual axon

The voltage-gated potassium channels ______ during repolarization. are in resting state are closed are inactivated are open

are inactivated

The voltage-gated potassium channels ______ during repolarization. are open are in resting state are closed are inactivated

are open

The perivascular feet of the ______ help create a blood-brain barrier. oligodenrocyte ependymal cell astrocyte microglial cell satellite cell

astrocyte

Which glial cell occupies the space of dying neurons? astrocytes microglia ependymal cells oligodendroctyes

astrocytes

The synaptic knob is found ______. at the extreme tips of the axon between the cell body and dendrite in the nucleus between the axon and axon hillock

at the extreme tips of the axon

The division of the nervous system that is subdivided into the sympathetic and parasympathetic divisions is the ______ nervous system.

autonomic

The ______ is sometimes called the nerve fiber. soma axon nucleus dendrite

axon

A fascicle is a bundle of ______. axons capillaries veins

axons

The presence of ______ ions causes the synaptic vesicles to bind to the membrane, allowing neurotransmitters to be released. sodium chloride potassium calcium

calcium

The ependymal cells help produce ______. urine white blood cells blood plasma cerebrospinal fluid

cerebrospinal fluid

Most synapses in the human body are ______ synapses. chemical electrical

chemical

Synapses are classified as ______. mechanical synapses chemical synapses electrical synapses

chemical synapses electrical synapses

Ependymal cells produce and circulate cerebrospinal fluid. The ______ helps circulate the CSF. cilia microtubule centriole flagella

cilia

Ganglia are ______. bundles of axons clusters of neuron cell bodies

clusters of neuron cell bodies

Match the neuronal structure with the appropriate description. dendrites axon hillock axon axoplasm

conduct information to to cell body triangular region connecting the axon to the cell body conducts information away from the cell body the cytoplasm of the axon

The total length of the axon is called the ______ segment.

conductive

A positive change in the membrane potential is called ______. inactivation repolarization hyperpolarization depolarization

depolarization

The event that occurs when the inside of the cell becomes more positive (less negative) than the resting membrane potential is called ______

depolarization

Membrane channels provide the means to move a substance ______ its concentration gradient. down up

down

Creating and transmitting ______ currents is central to the function of neuron physiology.

electrical

A difference in the number of charged particles between two sides of the membrane forms a(n) ______. chemical gradient sodium gradient electrical gradient

electrical gradient

Place the events of an EPSP in order

excitatory neurotransmitter binds to receptor Na+ channel more Na+ enter the postsynaptic cell then K+ leaves the inside of the cell becomes more positive the local current of Na+ becomes weaker as it moves toward the axon hilcock

True or false: A neuromodulator is another name for a neurotransmitter.

false

True or false: The relative charge across a neuron's plasma membrane is negative outside the cell relative to the inside of the cell.

false

Sensory input and motor output are used to divide the nervous system ______. functionally structurally

functionally

Neuron cell bodies in the peripheral nervous system are found clustered in ______. nuclei glomeruli ganglia

ganglia

The peripheral nervous system is made of nerves and _______

ganglia

A cluster of neuron cell bodies found along a peripheral nerve is known as a(n) _______

ganglion

A potential that is a temporary change in membrane potential which lasts only as long as the stimulus that causes it and can vary in size is called a ______ potential.

graded

Negatively charged proteins and other large organic molecules are found in ______. equal amounts inside and outside a neuron greater amounts inside a neuron greater amounts outside a neuron

greater amounts inside a neuron

The changes in membrane potential associated with both EPSP and IPSP inputs are "added" in the ______ to determine if an action potential is initiated and the threshold is reached. postsynaptic membrane axon conductive segment initial segment

initial segment

The electrical gradient in a resting neuron is such that the _____ of the cell is negative relative to the _______

inside outside

Which of the following are functional classes of neurons? interneurons bipolar neurons multipolar neurons unipolar neurons motor neurons sensory neurons

interneurons motor neurons sensory neurons

Match the location with the larger concentration of ions. organic ions sodium

intracellular extracellular

The autonomic nervous system is ______. voluntary involuntary

involuntary

During an action potential, voltage-gated potassium channels open after voltage-gated sodium channels. The effect this has on the membrane potential is ______. it has no effect on the membrane potential it becomes more positive it becomes less positive and more negative

it becomes less positive and more negative

Channels that allow an ungated flow of specific ions from regions of high concentration to regions of low concentration are called ________ channels.

leak

Which glial cells remove debris from damaged or dead nervous tissue? oligodendrocytes microglia schwann cells ependymal cells

microglia

Cells that wander through the CNS and replicate in response to infection are called ______

microglial

The brain interprets the increased frequency of nerve signals as a ______ stimulus. more intense less intense

more intense

Interneurons are ______ neurons. unipolar bipolar multipolar

multipolar

Most motor neurons are ______. multipolar unipolar bipolar

multipolar

______ neurons are most common. Unipolar Multipolar Bipolar

multipolar

Oligodendrocytes create the _______ sheath in the central nervous system.

myelin

The presence of a ____ sheath increases the rate of impulse conduction.

myelin

What is found in the ganglia of spinal nerves? neuron cell bodies motor nerves only entire axons

neuron cell bodies

Neuromodulation alters the response of ______ to neurotransmitters. glial cells neurons

neurons

The components of nervous tissue that conduct electrical impulses are ______. blood vessels glial cells neurons ganglia

neurons

Chemicals that are released from synaptic knobs and bind to receptors on postsynaptic membranes are called ______

neurotransmitters

The neuron cell body houses both the ______ and the cytoplasm. myelin sheath nucleus dendrite axon axon hillock

nucleus

Which of the following would be likely to cause hyperpolarization of a neuron? opening of a chemically gated chloride channel opening of a voltage-gated potassium channel opening of a chemically gated sodium channel opening of a voltage-gated sodium channel

opening of a chemically gated chloride channel opening of a voltage-gated potassium channel

Which of the following would be likely to cause depolarization of a neuron? opening of a voltage-gated sodium channel opening of a chemically gated sodium channel opening of a chemically gated chloride channel opening of a voltage-gated potassium channel

opening of a voltage-gated sodium channel opening of a chemically gated sodium channel

A fascicle is surrounded by a layer of dense irregular connective tissue called ______. epineurium fascia endoneurium perineurium

perineurium

Spinal nerves are part of the ______ nervous system. peripheral central

peripheral

The sequential opening of voltage-gated sodium channels is followed by the sequential opening of voltage-gated ______ channels.

potassium

A return of the membrane potential towards the resting membrane potential immediately the following depolarization is called ______. depolarization repolarization summation

repolarization

Na+ and K+ leak channels and Na+/K+ pumps on the neuron are responsible for establishing and maintaining the _______ membrane ______

resting potential

The relative difference in charge across the plasma membrane of a resting neuron is known as the _______ ________ ________

resting membrane potential

The function of a neuron is dependent on ______. resting membrane potentials changing resting membrane potentials staying the same

resting membrane potentials changing

The removal of neurotransmitters from the synaptic cleft by transport into the synaptic knob is known as ______. degradation reuptake diffusion

reuptake

Chromatophilic substance and Nissl bodies are both types of _____-.

ribosomes

Which of the following are characteristics of neurons? secretion conductivity amitotic excitability nonexcitable extreme longevity protection support

secretion conductivity amitotic excitability extreme longevity

Glial cells are ______ than neurons. larger smaller

smaller

The flow of ______ ion is the most common cause of depolarization. sodium calcium potassium chloride

sodium

The flow of ______ ion is the most common cause of depolarization. sodium potassium calcium chloride

sodium

An action potential cannot be initiated during the absolute refractory period because ______. sodium channels are inactivated, and thus can not open potassium channels are inactivated, and thus can not open there are no sodium channels in the membrane potassium channels are activated

sodium channels are inactivated, and thus can not open

A damaged axon within the PNS can regenerate if ______. some neurilemma remains part of the cell body remains some oligodendrocytes remain some dendrocytes remain

some neurilemma remains

Fill in the blank question. The process by which postsynaptic potentials are added together at the initial segment is known as ______

summation

Neurons integrate multiple synaptic inputs by the process of ______. conduction propagation anterograde transport summation

summation

Neurotransmitters are stored in ______. motor end plates axon hillocks synaptic vesicles

synaptic vesicles

"An action potential either happens or it doesn't." This statement could also be called ______. the all-or-none law the refractory law the threshold law

the all-or-none law

The two factors that affect PNS regeneration are ______. the amount of damage presence of ependymal cells rate of microglial cell division the distance between the injury site and the effector organ

the amount of damage the distance between the injury site and the effector organ

The myelin sheath covers ______. the axon the cell body the nerve the choroid plexus

the axon

If summated PSPs reach a threshold, an action potential begins first in ______. the dendrites the initial segment the axon the cell body

the initial segment

The voltage-gated sodium channels undergo changes in activity during the depolarization phase of an action potential. Place these in order from first to last.

the membrane potential is -70 mv sodium ions flow into the neuron the membrane potential becomes more positive voltage gated sodium ion channels open

Vesicles involved in retrograde transport are moving ______ the cell body. toward away from toward and away from

toward

The blood-brain barrier helps protect the brain from ______. blood electricity toxins water

toxins

True or false: Graded potentials vary in size depending on the stimulus. True False

true

True or false: In most cases, a single EPSP is not sufficient to cause a neuron to reach the threshold potential.

true

Which of the following ions have leak channels on the plasma membrane? Ca2+ H+ Na+ K+

Na+ K+

Pseudounipolar is another name for a ______ neuron unipolar bipolar multipolar

unipolar

What are the two structural examples of sensory neurons? unipolar bipolar multipolar

unipolar bipolar

______ are released from neurons in response to conductive activity. Mitotic cells Neurotransmitters Graded potentials Electrons

Neurotransmitters

________ are large cells that ensheath many different axons.

Oligodendrocytes

______ is the return of polarity from positive back to negative (the RMP). Depolarization Summation Repolarization

Repolarization

______ (is) are the slightly expanded region at the tip of the fine terminal extensions of a neuron. Axon collaterals Perikaryon Synaptic knobs

Synaptic knobs

Which describes the propagation of depolarization down an axon? Sodium influx triggers sodium efflux. The flow of Na+ to downstream regions causes depolarization of adjacent regions. Sodium flows into the cell in one region and backs out again at another region. The flow of Na+ into adjacent regions causes potassium channels to open.

The flow of Na+ to downstream regions causes depolarization of adjacent regions.

______ neurons have a single, short neuron process that emerges from the cell body and branches like a T. Unipolar Bipolar Multipolar

Unipolar

______ to help return the membrane potential to the resting state following hyperpolarization. Voltage-gated potassium channels close Na+/K+ pumps restore gradients Calcium channels open Voltage-gated sodium channels open

Voltage-gated potassium channels close Na+/K+ pumps restore gradients

______ and are the cause of hyperpolarization in an action potential. Voltage-gated potassium channels inactivate Voltage-gated chloride channels open Voltage-gated potassium channels remain open

Voltage-gated potassium channels remain open

______ there would be no net movement of K+ ions through an open K+ leak channel. When the chemical gradient is greater than the electrical gradient When the electrical gradient is greater than the chemical gradient When the electrical gradient and chemical gradient balance each other

When the electrical gradient and chemical gradient balance each other

Membrane pumps require ______ energy. no a lot of

a lot of

Sensory ______ neurons carry information ______ the central nervous system. afferent; toward efferent; away from afferent; away from efferent; toward

afferent; toward

The refractory period occurs immediately ______ an action potential. before after

after

The relative refractory period occurs ______ the absolute refractory period. after before

after

Match the neurotransmitter to its class. glutamate norepinephrine

amino acid monoamine

Match the neurotransmitter with its correct class. glycine dopamine neuropeptide

amino acid monoamine enkephalin

The ______ is the functional division of the nervous system that controls the involuntary movement of smooth muscle. visceral sensory nervous system central nervous system peripheral nervous system somatic motor nervous system somatic sensory nervous system autonomic motor nervous system

autonomic motor nervous system

The plasma membrane of an axon is called the _______

axolemma

Cytoplasm within an axon is called ______. axoplasm axolemma Nissl substance

axoplasm

Many excitatory neurotransmitters cause the opening of channels that allow for the flow of ______. Cl- only Na+ only both Na+ and K+ K+ only

both Na+ and K+

Which are components of the central nervous system? brain and spinal cord cranial nerves and the brain cranial and spinal nerves

brain and spinal cord

Dendrites branch off of the ______. synaptic knobs cell body axon axon hillock

cell body

Soma is another name for the ______. dendrites axon hillock cell body myelin sheath axon

cell body

The brain and spinal cord are part of the ______. peripheral nervous system motor nervous system central nervous system sensory nervous system

central nervous system

Another way for the neurotransmitter to be removed from the synaptic cleft is by ______ where there is uptake by surrounding glial cells. extrusion reuptake diffusion

diffusion

Glial cells ______ transmit electrical impulses. do not do

do not

The tissues that receive nerve impulses from motor neurons are called ______. receptors effectors

effectors

Motor neurons are classified as ______ neurons. interneuron afferent efferent

efferent

Synaptic knobs are also called ______. somas nerve fibers end bulbs terminal boutons

end bulbs terminal boutons

An individual axon is wrapped in a connective tissue covering called the ______. epineurium endoneurium perineurium

endoneurium

The choroid plexus is made from capillaries and ______. astrocytes microglial cells oligodendrocytes ependymal cells

ependymal cells

The lining ventricles of the brain is a location of ______. Multiple choice question. microglia satellite cells astrocytes ependymal cells

ependymal cells

Choose the cells that are part of the central nervous system. neurolemmocyte ependymal cells astrocyte oligodendrocyte satellite cells microglia

ependymal cells astrocyte oligodendrocyte microglia

An entire nerve is surrounded by a connective tissue covering called the ______. epineurium endoneurium perineurium

epineurium

A larger axon transmits an impulse ______ than a smaller axon. slower faster

faster

Neurons are classified ______ depending on the direction the nerve impulse travels. structurally functionally

functionally

The chromatophilic substance helps create the ______ color in parts of the brain and spinal cord. white gray

gray

The functions of astrocytes are to ______. help form the blood-brain barrier myelinate axons of the PNS regulate the composition of interstitial fluid produce cerebrospinal fluid assist neuronal development

help form the blood-brain barrier regulate the composition of interstitial fluid assist neuronal development

Fill in the blank question. Immediately following the repolarization of an action potential, the membrane undergoes _______ before returning to the resting membrane potential.

hyperpolarization

The event that occurs when the inside of a cell becomes more negative than the resting membrane potential is called ________

hyperpolarization

The myelin sheath is made of a high percentage of ______. lipids carbohydrates nucleic acids

lipids

It usually takes ______ neurolemmocytes to myelinate one axon. many two one

many

The resting membrane potential is measured in ______. millifarads milliwatts millivolts milliamps

millivolts

A nerve is part of the ______ nervous system. central peripheral

peripheral

Clusters of neuron cell bodies called ganglia are found in the ______ nervous system. central peripheral

peripheral

A cablelike bundle of axons in the peripheral nervous system is called a ______. nerve ganglion tract

nerve

A ______ is the propagation of an action potential along an axon. graded potential depolarized neuron nerve impulse repolarized neuron

nerve impulse

What is the primary tissue of the nervous system? muscle tissue nervous tissue connective tissue epithelial tissue

nervous tissue

The thin outer layer of the neurolemmocyte is called the ______. cilia choroid plexus neurofibril node neurilemma

neurilemma

The ability to alter the response of neurons to neurotransmitters is known as _______.

neuromodulation


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