Module 4 Flashcards

1
Q

Central Nervous System (CNS)

A

consists of the brain and spinal cord

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2
Q

Peripheral Nervous System (PNS)

A

consists of nerves to face, ganglia, nerves to upper limb, nerves to lower limbs

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3
Q

The nervous system

A
  • is a communication system that is involved in the coordination of almost all body functions
  • it is designed to receive signals from the internal and external environment
  • the signals are then interpreted to determine whether to stimulate or inhibit the activity of organs, tissues, and cells throughout the body
  • one of the main objectives is the maintenance of homeostasis, or a relatively stable internal environment
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4
Q

input

A
  • special senses - vision, hearing, taste, pain, body position
  • homeostasis - blood pressure and carbon dioxide levels, ion levels (pH (H+))
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5
Q

integration

A
  • a pain stimulus may trigger an immediate reflex, or it may be ignored
  • a soccer player processes information about her own body position and speed, as well as that of the body, her teammate and opponents can produce the muscle contractions needed to send a perfect pass
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6
Q

output

A
  • control of muscle contraction and glandular secretion of hormones
  • maintenance of homeostasis - increased carbon dioxide in the blood stimulates breathing rate
  • maintaining mental activity
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7
Q

neurons

A

are one of the main cell type within the nervous system,
- neuron’s have 3 structures facilitating the separate functions
1. input (dendrites)
2. processing (cell body)
3. output (axons)

Multipolar – many dendrites, large cell body – variety of inputs requiring processing. (most neurons are multipolar, e.g. motor neurons)
Bipolar – few dendrites, small cell body – limited input, focus on conduction of signal with minimal processing (sight and smell processing)
Pseudo-unipolar – dendrites not processed through cell body – simple relaying of signal with little processing (most other sensory neurons)

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8
Q

glial cells

A

are the other main cell type in the nervous system
- they perform structural support and protective roles by contributing to the blood-brain barrier (prevents movement of some molecules and compounds into the brain), as well as immune and nutrient provision functions

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9
Q

glial cells in the CNS

A
  1. Astrocytes - highly branched - provide structural support, regulate neuronal signalling, contribute to blood-brain barrier, and help with neural tissue repair
  2. Ependymal cells - epithelial-like - line ventricles of brain and central canal of the spinal cord, circulate cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), some form choroid plexuses which produce CSF
  3. Microglia - small, mobile cells - protect CNS from infection, become phagocytic in response to inflammation
  4. Oligodendrocytes - cells with processes that can surround several axons - cell processes form myelin sheaths around axons or enclose unmyelinated axons in the CNS
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10
Q

Glial cells of the PNS

A
  1. Schwann cells - single cells surrounding axons - form myelin sheaths around axons or enclose unmyelinated axons in the PNS
  2. Satellite cells - single cells surrounding cell bodies - support neurone, providing nutrients, protect neurone from heavy-metal poisons
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11
Q

myelin sheaths and nodes of raniver

A

specialised glial cells form coatings (myelin sheaths) around axons greatly increasing the velocity at which they can conduct action potentials (electrical signals)
- w/in the CNS these cells are called oligodendrocytes
- w/in the PNS these cells are called Schwann cells

Nodes of Ranvier: gaps between myelin sheaths, about every millimetre along axon
- allows for ion movement and faster conduction compared to unmyelinated axons

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12
Q

Stages of communication in a neuron

A
  1. generation of action potential in cell body
  2. action potential propagation along axon
  3. communication with target cell at synapse - chemical communication
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13
Q

Electrical communication

A

In cells that have electrical properties (e.g. nerve, muscle) there are different environments inside and outside the cell, with an uneven distribution of types of ions. The membrane becomes polarised, with the inside being more negatively charged than the outside. This creates an electrical potential across the cell membrane

  • potential energy used in secondary active transport of glucose
  • sodium down both chemical gradient and electrical gradient
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14
Q

Electrical gradient

A

Electrical gradient - Polarity – opposites attract each other, similar repel each other – positive ions attracted to negatively charged area

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15
Q

resting membrane potential

A

there are ion channels that are always open (leak ion channels) and ion channels that open when specific signals are present (gated ion channels)
Gated ion channels can be singled to open by chemicals (chemically gated) or electrical changes (voltage gated)

  • sodium (Na+) concentration gradient into cell
  • potassium (K+) concentration gradient out of cell
  • leak channels allow some ion movement
  • sodium-potassium pump - active transport of Na+ out and K+ in maintains resting membrane potential
  • negative inside cell, positive outside cell

Potential energy – stored energy – polarity is a stored gradient that when opened will result in movement based on the chemical (concentration gradient) and electrical potential ( electrical gradient).

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16
Q

action potential

A

electrical signals conducted along a cell membrane (neuron, muscle cell)

  • all or non - always the same magnitude one initiated
  • AP initiated by local threshold potential being reached
17
Q

membrane potential

A

depolarises during an action potential

18
Q

resting membrane potential, depolarisation, and repolarisation

A
  1. resting membrane potential
    - established by leak channels and Na+/K+ pump
  2. depolarization
    - open voltage gated Na+ channels
    - open when local membrane potential reaches threshold
    - positive sodium ions move in
  3. repolarizaton
    - Na+ channels close, voltage gated K+ channels open
    - positive potassium ions move out
    - Na/K+ pump works to re-establish resting membrane potential
19
Q

saltatory conduction

A

jumping from one node of Ranvier to the next

20
Q

Synapse

A

junction where the neuron interacts with another neuron or cell
- conversion of electrical message in axon into chemical message sent to next cell

Presynaptic terminal (before synapse)
1. action potential triggers voltage gated Calcium channels
2. Calcium moves in and stimulates vesicles to
3. release neurotransmitter into synaptic cleft (space between cells)

Postsynaptic membrane (after synapse)
4. neurotransmitters bind receptors on post synaptic membrane
- opening or closing chemically gated channels for: sodium, potassium, or chloride (Cl-)

21
Q

Acetylcholine (ACh) - neurotransmitter

A

Site of release: CNS synapse, ANS synapse, and neuromuscular junctions
Effect: excitatory or inhibitory
Clinical Example: alzheimer disease is associated with a decrease in acetylcholine-secreting neutrons. Myasthenia gravis (weakness of skeletal muscles) results from a reduction in acetylcholine receptors

22
Q

Norepinephrine (NE) - neurotransmitter

A

Site of release: selected CNS synapses and some ANS synapses
Effect: excitatory
Clinical example: cocaine and amphetamines increase the release and block the reuptake of norepinephrine, resulting in overstimulation of postsynaptic neurons

23
Q

Cobra - venom is a neurotoxin

A
  • venom blocks receptors for the neurotransmitter Acetylcholine (ACh) on the post synaptic membrane
  • venom is similar in structure to ACh
  • unable to stimulate muscle contraction
  • numbness and paralysis
  • breathing impacted as respiratory muscles paralyze
24
Q

spinal cord

A

collection of tracts leading to (ascending) and from (descending) the brain
- spinal nerves exit between each vertebrae

Dorsal - back
Ventral - front

25
gray matter
group of neuron cell bodies and dendrites - cortex or nuclei (CNS), ganglion (PNS)
26
white matter
bundles of parallel axons and their myelin sheaths - nerve tracts (CNS), nerves (PNS)
27
Spinal cord injury
- transection (complete cut) of the spinal cord results in loss of all sensation and voluntary movement inferior (below) to the point of damage - the patient is quadriplegic if the cord is transected superior to C5 - if the transection is above C4, the patient may die of respiratory failure - the patient is paraplegic - paralysis of both lower limbs - if the transection occurs below the cervical segment of the spinal cord
28
information processing - reflex arc - knee jerk reflex
1. sensory receptor 2. sensory neuron to spinal cord stimulates motor neuron and sends signal to brain 3. descending neuron 4. motor neuron to muscle 5. effector organ (Muscle)
29
brainstem
involved in body functions essential for survival - regulation of heart rate, breathing, blood pressure - Damage to brainstem likely to result in death
30
The cerebrum - lobes
Frontal lobe - voluntary motor function, motivation, aggression and mood Parietal lobe - receiving and perceiving sensory information Occipital lobe - visual input Temporal lobe - smell, hearing, memory - damage to cerebrum will impact higher functions but individual likely to survive.
31
voluntary movement
- single initiated in the motor cortex region of brain - descending tracts cross over to opposite side prior to entering spinal cord - motor neuron leaves spinal cord at ventral root - While a reflex does not require movement to be initiated from the brain, volunteer movement does
32
cerebellum
comparative function - intended movement compared with sensory feedback - necessary for smooth coordinated movements and learning movements - compares feedback from proprioceptive (body position) neurone in joints and muscles - alcohol inhibits the function of the cerebellum - impairing motor function
33
Autonomic nervous system
unconscious control of smooth muscle, cardiac muscle, organs and glands Sympathetic division: - activation prepares us for physical activity in response to stressors - fight or flight response - increased heart rate, breathing rate, blood pressure - circulation to muscles - slow digestive functions Parasympathetic division: - activation prepares body for resting and digestion - decreased heart rate, breathing rate, blood pressure - circulation to stomach and intestines - enhance digestive functions Division both innervate the same targets, with opposing influence Not on / off switch, consider them dimmer switches as we slide between dominance of each division. Anatomically, sympathetic from Thoracic vertebrae (chest), PS from cervical (neck) and Sacral (tail bone)
34
sympathetic
- originate from Thoracic (chest) spine - ganglion close to vertebrae - norepinephrine is neurotransmitter
35
parasympathetic
- originate from cranial nerves (head) and sacral (tailbone) spine - ganglion close to target - acetylcholine is neurotransmitter
36
Sympathetic effects on various tissues
heart - increases rate and force of contraction blood vessels - constricts and dilates lungs - dilates bronchioles eyes - dilates pupil, relaxes ciliary muscle to adjust lens for far vision intestinal and stomach walls - decreases motility, contacts sphincters liver - breaks down glycogen, releases glucose adipose tissue - breaks down lipids adrenal gland - secretes epinephrine, norepinephrine sweat glands - secretes sweat salivary glands - secretes thick saliva urinary bladder - relaxes muscle, constricts sphincter pancreas - decreases secretion of digestive enzymes and insulin
37
parasympathetic effects on various tissues
heart - decreases rate lungs - constricts bronchioles eyes - constricts pupil, contracts ciliary muscle to adjust lens for near vision intestinal and stomach walls - increases motility, relaxes sphincters liver - synthesises glycogen salivary glands - secretes watery saliva urinary bladder - contracts muscle, releases sphincter pancreas - increases secretion of digestive enzymes and insulin