Ch. 10 Anatomy
larger axons of peripheral neurons are encased in lipid-rich sheaths formed by layers of cell membranes of neuralgia cells called (wind tightly like a bandage around a finger; layers composed of myelin); enclose but do not wind around smallest axons of peripheral neurons, so these axons lack myelin sheath
Schwann cells
every neuron has 3 features
a cell body, many dendrites, and one axon
what surrounds the myelin sheath?
a neurilemma
axon's membrane is changing in sodium permeability and cannot be stimulated; sodium channels are still open
absolute refractory period
if a neuron responds at all, it responds completely
all-or-none response
star-shaped cells; found between neurons and blood vessels; aid in metabolism, regulate concentrations of ions, respond to injury of brain tissue, form special type of scar tissue, filling spaces in CNS; nutritive; blood-brain barrier
astrocytes
CNS contains 4 types of neuroglial cells
astrocytes, oligodendrocytes, microglia, ependyma
(motor portion of peripheral nervous system) controls viscera, such as the heart and various glands, and thus controls subconscious (involuntary actions)
autonomic nervous system
longer process that carries the information away from the cell in the form of bioelectric signals; arises from slight elevation of the cell body
axon
an axon may have many fine extensions, each with a specialized ending called an
axon terminal
process in which an axon conveys biochemicals that are produced in the neuron cell body
axonal transport
two processes, one on either end; processes similar in structure but one is an axon and the other is a dendrite; found in eyes, nose, and ears
bipolar neurons
classification of neurons on structural differences
bipolar, unipolar, multipolar
brain and spinal cord
central nervous system
many membranous packets scattered throughout the cytoplasm
chromatophilic substance (Nissl bodies)
axons give off these branches
collaterals
small cellular process that receive the input; highly branched, providing receptive surfaces to which processes from other neurons communicate
dendrites
responsive structures that receive impulses from CNS carried by motor functions; outside nervous system; muscles and glands
effectors
cuboidal or columnar in shape and may have cilia; form inner lining of the central canal that extends downward through spinal cord; form a one-cell-thick epithelial-like membrane that covers the inside of spaces within the brain called ventricles; cover choroid plexuses (specialized capillaries) that are associated with ventricles of the brain; regulate composition of cerebrospinal fluid
ependyma
sensory input
gathers info; monitor changes occurring inside and outside the body; convert their info into nerve impulses, peripheral nerves to CNS, signals integrated, decisions
cell body contains
granular cytoplasm, organelles, and microtubules
lie within brain or spinal cord; multipolar and form links between other neurons; transmit impulses from one part of the brain or spinal cord to another; they may direct incoming sensory impulses to appropriate regions for processing and interpreting
interneurons (association or internuncial neurons)
smallest and fewest processes; scattered throughout the central nervous system; support neurons and phagocytize bacterial cells and cellular debris; increase when brain or spinal cord is inflamed due to injury or disease
microglia
multipolar and carry nerve impulses out of the brain or spinal cord to effectors (structures that respond, such as muscles or glands); when motor impulses reach muscles, they contract; when motor impulses reach glands, they release sections) 2 specialized groups: accelerator (increase muscular activities) and inhibitory (decrease muscular activities) neurons
motor neurons
have many processes; only one is an axon; the rest are dendrites; most of the neurons whose cell bodies lie within the brain or spinal cord
multipolar neurons
has a higher proportion of lipid than other surface membranes;
myelin
coating on Schwann cells; lipid-rich covering of the axon
myelin sheath
axons that have myelin sheaths (appears white)
myelinated axons
bioelectric signals
nerve impulses
bundles of axons
nerves
nervous system is composed predominantly of
neural tissue; blood vessels and connective tissue
surrounds myelin sheath; portions of Schwann cells that contain most of the cytoplasm and the nuclei remain outside the myelin sheath to comprise a ___
neurilemma (neurilemmal sheath)
a network of fine threads that extends into the axons and supports them
neurofibrils
specialized to react to physical and chemical changes in their surroundings
neurons
neural tissue consists of two cell types
neurons (nerve cells) and neuroglial
neuroglial cells guide
neurons to their positions and may stimulate them to specialize; also signal neurons to form and maintain synapses
biological messenger molecules that actually carry information
neurotransmitters
narrow gaps in the myelin sheath between Schwann cells
nodes of Ranvier
small; few processes; rows along myelinated axons, form myelin in the brain and spinal cord; can send out a number of processes, each of which forms a myelin sheath around a nearby axon; a single one provides myelin for many axons; do not form neurilemma
oligodendrocytes
composed of the nerves (cranial and spinal) that connect the central nervous system to other body parts
peripheral nervous system
short time following a nerve impulse that a threshold stimulus will not trigger another impulse
refractory period
the membrane reeestablishes its resting potential; a threshold stimulus of high intensity may trigger an impulse
relative refractory period
carry nerve impulses from peripheral body parts into the brain or spinal cord; have specialized receptor ends at the tips of their dendrites OR have dendrites that are near receptor cells in the skin or in certain sensory organs; changes that occur inside or outside the body stimulate receptor cells, triggering sensory nerve impulses, which travel on axons into the brain or spinal cord
sensory neurons (afferent neurons)
classification of neurons on functional differences (depending on whether they carry info into the CNS, completely within the CNS, or out of the CNS)
sensory neurons, interneurons, motor neurons
at ends of peripheral neurons; provide sensory function
sensory receptors
three general functions
sensory, integrative, and motor
neurofibrils support fibers in the
soma
(motor portion of peripheral nervous system) involved in conscious (voluntary) activities, such as skeletal muscle contraction
somatic nervous system
small spaces between neurons
synapses
space that separates synaptic knobs very close to the receptive surface of another cell (at terminal, separated from another receptive surface by __)
synaptic cleft
neuralgia cells produce
the growth factors that nourish neurons and remove ions and neurotransmitters that accumulate between neurons, enabling them to continue transmitting info
each type of neuron is specialized to send a nerve impulse in one direction, originating at a sensitive region of the axon called the
trigger zone
a single process that divides into 2 branches, which function as a single axon (one branch (peripheral process) is associated with dendrites near a peripheral body part; the other branch (central process) enters the brain of spinal cord); aggregate in specialized masses of nerve tissue called ganglia
unipolar neurons
axons that lack myeline sheaths (appears gray)
unmyelinated axons