Nervous Systems and Brain Cells - Week 7 Flashcards
CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM
Is made up of the BRAIN STEM and SPINAL CORD:
The brain controls how we think, learn, move, and feel.
The spinal cord carries messages back and forth between the brain and the nerves that run throughout the body.
CNS is responsible for receiving, processing and responding to sensory info
Both the brain and the spinal cord are protected by bone: the brain by the bones of the skull, and the spinal cord by vertebrae , a set of ring-shaped bones. They’re both cushioned by layers of membranes (called meninges) and cerebrospinal fluid. The fluid flows through hollow spaces in the brain called ventricles and around the spine in the spinal column. It protects the central nervous system, nourishes it, and takes away waste products.
BRAIN STEM
Connects the cerebrum of the brain to the spinal cord and cerebellum.
It controls basic functions such as breathing and heart rate.
It is composed of three sections in descending order: the midbrain, pons and medulla oblongata
CEREBRUM
Is the largest part of the brain and it is located at the front and top of the skull.
It is split into two halves called ‘hemispheres’.
It comes from Latin name meaning ‘brain’.
Is responsible for higher cognitive functions such as thinking, memory, and perception
CEREBELLUM
It is responsible for motor movement and balance (posture & balance, mental function, movement, motor learning, vision).
There are 4 lobes of the cerebrum (frontal, parietal, occipital, temporal).
It holds more than half of the neurons (cells that make up your nervous system).
SPINAL CORD
Serves as a pathway for transmitting sensory and motor signals between the brain and the rest of the body.
It is part of the Central Nervous System
PERIPHERAL NERVOUS SYSTEM
It is part of your nervous system that consists of nerves and ganglia and lies outside of your brain and spinal cord.
It plays key role in both sending information from different areas of your body back to your brain, as well as carrying out commands from your brain to various parts of your body.
The PNS is subdivided into Somatic and Automatic Nervous System.
SOMATIC NERVOUS SYSTEM
It is a component of PNS.
It controls intentional processes and is responsible for VOLUNTARY movements and sensory perception.
It receives sensory input form the external environment and delivers motor/ muscle output to skeletal muscles.
*Sensory output is received through the dorsal roots to the spinal cord
*Motor outputs is delivered via the Ventral roots of the spinal cord to the muscle
This system allows us to control our movements and respond to stimuli consciously.
The brain receives sensory information (of touch) at the somatosensory cortex and produces behaviour by modulating motor output form the primary motor cortex.
There are 6 areas that the nerves join the CNS - cranial, cervical, thoracic, lumbar, sacral, coccygeal and there are 4 lobes of the cerebrum.
e.g., a somatic reflex -> pulling a hand away after touching a hot stove
AUTONOMIC NERVOUS SYSTEM
It is a component of PNS.
It regulates INVOLUNTARY functions of the body, such as heart rate, digestion, breathing and blood pressure.
It regulates survival mechanisms e.g., heart rate increase and start sweating.
It consists of two divisions: the sympathetic and parasympathetic, which are parallel systems that work in opposition to each other
SYMPATHETIC NS (AUTONOMIC NS) - PERIPHERAL NS
4 F’s (fight, flight, fright/ freeze, fornicate/ fawn).
It is in the Automatic Nervous System, which is part of Peripheral Nervous System. It extends from thoracic and lumbar spine and has short preganglionic (cell body) nerves and long postganglionic nerves.
It carries signals that put your body on alert. It prepares the body for ‘fight or flight’ responses in danger or stressful situations.
PARASYMPATHETIC NS (AUTONOMIC NS) - PERIPHERAL NS
It is a network of nerves that relaxes your body after periods of stress and danger.
It is non emergency, which is responsible for (digestion, growth, immune response, energy storage.
It extends from cranium and sacral spine (craniosacral) and has long preganglionic nerves and short postganglionic nerves
It controls homeostasis and the body at rest and is responsible for the body’s “rest and digest” function
PERIPHERAL NERVES
They reside outside your brain and spinal cord. They relay information between your brain and the rest of your body.
It is made up of 12 Cranial Nerves, which come out of the opening in the skull and 31 Spinal Nerves (Cervical Nerves = 8 pairs; Thoracic Nerves = 12 pairs; Lumbar Nerves = 5 pairs; Sacral Nerves = 5 pairs; Coccygeal Nerves = 1 pair).
LOBES OF CEREBRUM CORTEX
The cerebrum consists of two cerebral hemispheres the outer layer called the cortex (grey matter) and the inner layer (white matter).
There are four lobes in the cortex, the frontal lobe, parietal lobe, temporal lobe, occipital lobe
FRONTAL LOBE
It is the front-most part of your brain, which is directly behind the forehead.
Is responsible for executive functions like judgement, higher order function such as attention, thinking, memory, emotions and reasoning.
It controls over voluntary movement and many abilities (including the way you think, how you move and how you remember things.
It’s also a key part in your social skills, and helps you understand and control how you talk, behave and interact with others.
It is in the Primary Motor Cortex and Central Sulcus separates it with Parietal Lobe
PARIETAL LOBE
It is located near the back and top of the head in the Primary Somatosensory Cortex.
It is responsible for some of the sensory processing such as touch, sensation, tactile, proprioception, body awareness and space.
Eg. they inform us about objects in our external environment through touch (i.e., physical contact with skin) and about the position and movement of our body parts (proprioception).
TEMPORAL LOBE
It is a part of your brain that helps you use your senses to understand and respond to the world around you.
It is responsible for smell and have olfactory nerves, taste, perception, auditory processing, storing and retrieving memories, and understanding language, managing emotions
OCCIPITAL LOBE
It sits at the back of the head and are responsible for visual perception, including colour, form and motion.
The occipital lobes transmit visual information to the temporal lobes, which aids in giving meaning to visual information, storing memories, and responding to external stimuli in the world.
HORMONES
Hormones are chemicals that coordinate different functions in your body by carrying messages through your blood to your organs, skin, muscles and other tissues. These signals tell your body what to do and when to do it.
Hormones help coordinate your body’s functions, from metabolism to growth and development, emotions, mood, sexual function and even sleep.
*Hypothalamus & Pituitary (many different hormones)
*Pineal gland (melatonin)
HYPOTHALAMUS
It is the size of an almond, which is located in the ventral brain, which is below the third ventricle (below the) thalamus and above the pituitary gland.
Its main function is to keep your body in a stable state called ‘‘homeostasis. It is directly influencing your autonomic nervous system or by managing hormones.
It produces and releases hormones from the pituitary gland (cortisol, vasopressin, oxytocin).
The hypothalamus and pituitary gland form a complex regulatory system that controls a wide range of bodily functions, including growth, metabolism, reproduction, and stress response.
PITUITARY GLAND
Often referred as the ‘master gland’ which is below the hypothalamus.
It receives signals for the hypothalamus and releases hormones that control activity of other endocrine glands throughout the body.
These hormones include growth hormone, thyroid-stimulating hormone, adrenocorticotropic hormone, follicle-stimulation hormone, luteinising hormone, and prolactin
PINEAL GLAND
It is a very small gland in the centre of your brain. The pineal gland makes a hormone called melatonin. Melatonin helps your body control day-night sleep patterns and your internal body clock (circadian rhythms).
ANTERIOR (FRONT) LOBE OF PITUITARY
It regulates growth, metabolism, and reproduction through the hormones that it produces.
POSTERIOR (BACK) LOBE OF PITUITARY
Plays an important role in fine motor coordination, specifically in the inhibition of involuntary neurotransmitters, especially GABA
CORTISOL (HORMONE)
Is a steroid hormone that is produced by your 2 adrenal glands, which sit on top of each kidney. When you are stressed, increased cortisol is released into your bloodstream.
VASOPRESSIN (HORMONE)
It is a nonapeptide synthesized in the hypothalamus, which controls of the body’s osmotic balance, blood pressure regulation, sodium homeostasis, and kidney functioning.
Regulation of body fluid (decreases water excretion by the kidneys by increasing water reabsorption in the collecting ducts)