overview of nervous system Flashcards
What is nervous system responsible for?
behaviors, memories, and movements
3 functions of NS
- Sensory: afferent nerves
- Integrative: association or interneurons
- motor: efferent neurons
NS divisions
CNS: brain and spinal cord
PNS: cranial and spinal nerves –> sensory and motor fibers–> connects CNS to muscles, glands, and receptors
PNS Divisions
Somatic NS = neurons from cutaneous and special sense neurons to CNS & motor neurons to skeletal muscles
Autonomic NS = sensory neurons from visceral organs to CNS & motor neurons to smooth and cardiac muscles (sympathetic and parasympathetic)
Enteric NS = involuntary sensory and motor neurons controlling GI tract (function independantly of ANS and CNS)
Neurons
- func. unit of NS
- capable of producing AP
- 1 nucleus w/ prominant nucleolus
- not centriole –> don’t divide
- Nissl bodies (chromatophillic substance) = RER and free ribososmes for protein synth
- neurofilaments structure cell
- microtubules move stuff w/in cell
- lipofuscin pigment clumps (harmless aging)
structural classification of neurons
- Multipolar = many dendrites, 1 axon –> motor
- Bipolar = one dendrite, one axon –> special senses
- Unipolar = 1 process, divided –> sensory neurons
axonal transport (definition and slow vs fast)
- cell body is location for most protein synth
- slow axonal flow = 1-way flow (away) –> 1-5 mm/day
- fast axonal flow = 2-way–> travels along surface of microtubules–> 200-400 mm/day
Dif b/t neuroglia of CNS vs PNS
more complex and more numerous
astrocytes
CNS
- most numerous one
- anchor neurons/blood vessels
- maintain blood-brain barrier
Microglial cells
CNS
- phagocytic
- defensive
Ependymal cells
CNS
- line cavities
- secrete CSF
- circulate CSF with cilia
Oligodendrocytes
CNS
- have processes that form myelin sheaths around CNS fibers
- reach multiple axons/sections of axons
Satellite cells
PNS
- surround neuron cell body
- protect and maintain chemical environment
Schwann cell
PNS
- surround fibers and form myelin sheaths
- vital to regenerate damaged peripheral nerve fibers
Myelination
- Schwann cells myelinate acons in PNS during fetal dvlpmnt
- Schwann cell cytoplasm and nucleus form outermost layer of neurolemma with inner portion being the myelin sheath
- tube guides growig axons that’re repairing themselves