Anatomy and Physiology Module 10 - Nervous System

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What kind of neurotransmitter is GABA

Negative or inhibitory neurotransmitter

A mass of nerve cells is called

Neurons

What is the base unit of the nervous system

Neurons

Does a reflex involving a painful stimulus get processed in the brain

No

Gaps between the myelin sheath along an axon are called:

Nodes of Ranvier

What are the gaps between the Schwann cells called?

Nodes of Ranvier

Basal ganglia

Nuclei that control the motor control

Which part of the brain is responsible for processing visual information?

Occipital lobe

Where does the Potassium begin

On the inside of the banana

Where does the Sodium begin

On the outside of the banana

Does a reflex involving a painful stimulus go through the CNS or just the PNS

PNS

What nervous system is this a part of: CNS or PNS

PNS

Which of the following is not part of the neuron?

Pons

Repolarization occurs as a result of...

Potassium ions diffusing to the outside of the cell membrane and potassium channels closing.

List the parts of a reflex arc in the correct sequence.

Receptor, sensory neuron, interneuron, motor neuron, effector

What is the Na+/K+ pump

Reestablishes the gradient

What side does your left field of view go to in the brain

Right

What happens during an "electrical storm" in the brain

Seizure

Posterior pituitary

Sending off hormones

Parietal lobe

Sensation

Somatosensory cortex

Sensory (info) nerves coming into the brain

What type of receptor receives information when you touch something

Sensory neurons

What surgical procedure can be used to calm seizures

Sever the corpus callosum, and when it severed the 2 hemispheres can't communicate

What pair of ions are responsible for depolarization of the membrane?

Sodium and Potassium

What ions are necessary for a nerve impulse to occur?

Sodium and potassium

Which part of the nervous system controls voluntary movement?

Somatic

Thalamus

Sorts data and sends information where it needs to go.

List the four sections of the primitive brain

Spinal cord, hindbrain, midbrain, forebrain

When sodium enters the membrane during message transfer and depolarization occurs. what typically happens to the voltage?

Starts at -55 mV and becomes more positive

A ___ is the gap located between the terminal ends of the axons and the target cell to receive the message.

Synapse

What is the gap between neurons

Synapse

What does he recommend about the number of connections

The number of connections forms memories. The more things you can get via auditoral, verbal, etc. The more likely you are to remember things.

Once the Sodium channels close, what happens next

The potassium channels open up and allow the potassium to exit the banana so there is a balance.

List the steps of the action potential at a nerve synapse

We get an influx of calcium ions, that release neurotransmitters across the gap that match up with a channel on the other side of the gap, changes it shape so it can take ions in.

What is function

What does it do

What is structure

What its made up of

A threshold stimulus results in the creation of a(n):

action potential

What is another term for a nerve impulse?

action potential

When the membrane potential depolarizes, if it reaches a threshold a(n) _______ will result.

action potential

Sensory neuron = Motor neuron =

afferent efferent

Which cell connects neurons to blood vessels?

astrocyte

The central nervous system consists of the:

brain and spinal cord

Breathing and circulation are two very important necessities of life that are controlled by the ___ of the Central Nervous System.

brain stem

Which part of the CNS makes up 80% of the brain?

cerebrum

What allows the ions to cross the membrane

channels

When nerve cells come together in a neuronal pool to make a signal stronger they are?

converging

When a message is sent from one neuron to the next, and the message keeps on going it is considered to be_

excitatory

When a neuron becomes more excitable because of incoming subthreshold stimulation, it is said to be..

facilated

A mass of nerve cells are called what?

ganglia

When Sodium crosses the membrane during a "message transfer", what typically happens to the voltage?

increases up to +50mV

A person with an injury to her frontal lobe may have

mood swings

White matter appears white due to ________.

myelin

___ are chemicals that are responsible for sending messages from one neuron to the next.

neurotransmitters

Which neuronal cells are responsible for providing support and insulation to the axons by creating a myelin sheath?

oligodendrocytes

A person with an injury to her frontal lobe may have difficulty

reasoning and making decisions

When a nerve cell is polarized (at its resting potential), the concentration of...

sodium ions are higher on the outside and potassium ions are higher on the inside of it's membrane

The skeletal muscles are controlled by the...

somatic nervous system

Reflexes (such as the knee-jerk reflex) occur when impulses travel from the muscle to the ____ and then back to the muscle.

spinal cord

Masses of myelinated nerve fibers appear...

white

Which reflex responds to pain?

withdrawal reflex

Frontal Lobe

Emotional control

Cerebrum includes

-Corpus callosum -Basal ganglia -Cerebral cortex -Frontal Lobe -Parietal lobe -Occipital lobe -Temporal lobe -Somatosensory cortex -Motor cortex

Brain Stem includes

-Midbrain -Pons -Medulla

Thalamus includes

-Thalamus -Hypothalamus -Posterior pituitary

What is the axon

Everything from the dendrite to the end of the neuron (axon terminals).

Why can't a person describe what they saw if it was on the left side of the Plus sign (+)

It's being processed on the right side of the brain, and on the right side they can't use speech to describe what they saw.

Temporal lobe

Language, hearing, memory

How should you refer to the hemispheres of the brain

Left and right hemispheres

Jamey was hit in the head with a softball during his game last summer and is currently undergoing speech therapy due to damage sustained to this part of the cerebrum.

Left side of cerebrum

Cerebral cortex

Main part of the brain (80%).

What is an action potential

Messages

In the central nervous system, myelin is formed by...

Microglial Cells

Motor cortex

Motor nerves going out

What is a reflex

Body reacts to a stimulus with a patterned response.

After the sensory neuron, where is a signal sent for processing

Brain

Midbrain

Breathing

What happens to the voltage when the Sodium crosses the membrane

It will become less and channels are activated by the mV

What happens when the threshold is met

It will have an action potential

If motor control and motor memory are bodily functions affected from a motor vehicle accident, which part of the brain was damaged due to the trauma?

Cerebellum

Once muscle contractions are initiated, what portion of the Central Nervous System ensures that the motions are smooth and well coordinated?

Cerebellum

Which of the following is NOT part of the limbic system?hypothalamus, Hippocampus, Amygdala, Cerebellum

Cerebellum

Skeletal muscle contractions are begun by signals coming from the _____.

Cerebral Cortex

What do the neurotransmitters do

Chemicals that send a message to the next neuron

Pons

Circulation

Give an example of radial symmetry (different from the video)

Coral polyp

What connects the two sides of the brain

Corpus callosum

What is the name of the structure that affords a connection between the right and left hemispheres of the brain?

Corpus collosum

Which direction does an impulse travel along a neuron?

Dendrite to axon

Put these in the correct order from receiving an action potential to passing it on to the next neuron: cell body, axon, dendrite

Dendrite 🡪 Cell body 🡪 axon

The cytoplasmic extensions that provide the main receptive surfaces for neurons are?

Dendrites

Medulla oblongata

Digestion

When do the channels open - all at once or as a domino effect

Domino effect

What type of neuron carries the information away from the spinal cord to the muscle or effector organ

Motor neuron or effector neurons

What is the threshold measurement

-55mV

What is the resting voltage of the membrane?

-70 mV

What is the voltage for the membrane

-70mV for an average neuron

Corpus callosum

A bundle of nerves that connects 2 hemispheres of the brain

What goes to your brain after you are hurt

A number of action potentials

Describe the role of a synapse and neurotransmitters in the communication between nerve cells. Also describe the difference between excitatory and inhibitory synapses.

A synapse is a site of transmission of electrical nerve impulses between two neurons. Synapse helps to permit a neuron to pass an electrical or chemical signal to another neuron, or target effector cell. Synapse and neurotransmitters work together in a way because in a synapse its impulses pass by diffusion of a neurotransmitter. Neurotransmitters help to transmit messages between neurons and communication between 2 neurons is located in the synaptic cleft. The difference between excitatory and inhibitory synapses is that excitatory synapses increase the activity of the receiving neuron, while inhibitory synapses reduce neuron activity.

Which cell types receive external signals and carry them to the CNS?

Afferent (Sensory)

What kinds of functions are found closest to the spinal cord

Basic functions such as keeping the heart beating, keeping the circulation going, and keeping digestion going

Cerebellum

Body control (such as coordination) and motion memory. "Balance and coordination"

What is myelin

Fat material, and its used to insulate and speed up messages as they go.

Which relates to the physiology

Function

What happens at a node of Ranvier

Gaps between the myelin where the message jumps

Hypothalamus

Homeostasis (temperature, osmolarity)

Describe the space between action potentials if the pain is severe or light

If the pain is severe the space is very short, and if the pain is very light there is a lot of space between action potentials.

How is myelin formed in the PNS and CNS

In the PNS myelin is formed by Schwan cells, and in the CNS myelin is formed by oligodendroglial cells

What is a Schwann cell

It is what myelin is made of.

Which direction does an inhibitory message send the voltage

It send the voltage further down from -70

What are the two divisions of the nervous system, and describe them briefly

The two divisions are the central nervous system and the peripheral nervous system. The central nervous system includes the brain and spinal cord, while the peripheral nervous system includes the remainder of the nerves in the body, which all connect to the central nervous system.

Occipital lobe

Vision

What does an excitatory message mean

Want the action potential to go (fire)

What does an inhibitory message mean

Wants the action potential to stop (don't fire)


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