Richard (Neurophysiology) Flashcards

1
Q

What are the definitions of the following?:
- Nerve impulse
- Motor unit
- Axon
- Axon terminal
- Neuromuscular junction
- Synaptic cleft
- Acetylcholine (ACh)

A

Nerve impulse- 1 nerve cell stimulates many muscle cells
Motor unit- 1 neutron and muscle stimulated cells
Axon- extension of neuron
Axon terminal- end of Xon
Neuromuscular junction- where axon terminal meets muscle fibre
Synaptic cleft- space between neutron and muscle fibre
Acetylcholine- neurotransmitter

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2
Q

What does the nervous system split into?

A

Peripheral nervous system (PNS) (involves cranial nerves and spinal nerves, communication lines between the CNS and the rest of the body) and Central nervous system (CNS) (involves brain and spinal cord, integrative and control centres)

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3
Q

What does the PNS split into?

A

Sensory (afferent) division (somatic and visceral sensory nerve fibres, conducts impulses from receptors to the CNS) and motor (efferent) division (motor nerve fibres, conducts impulses from the CNS to effectors)

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4
Q

What does the motor division split into?

A

Autonomic nervous system (involuntary, conducts impulses from the CNS to cardiac muscles, smooth muscles, and glands) and somatic nervous system (voluntary, conducts impulses from the CNS to skeletal muscles)

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5
Q

What does the autonomic split into?

A

Sympathetic division (arousing, mobilises body systems during activity) and parasympathetic division (calming, conserves energy, promotes house-keeping functions during rest)

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6
Q

Neuroglia

A

Neuroglia are a large class of neural cells including astrocytes, microglia, oligodendrocytes, and ependymal cells.

  • Astrocytes- most abundant, versatile, and highly branched glial cells. Cling to neutrons, synaptic endings, and capillaries.
  • Microglia- small, ovoid cells with thorny processes that touch and monitor neurones. Migrate towards injured neurones. Can transform to phagocytise microorganisms and neuronal debris. (Same function as macrophages but work in the brain)
  • Oligodendrocytes- branched cells. Form myelin sheath in CNS. (In PNS Schwann cells form myelin sheath)
  • Ependymal cells- range in shape from squamous to columnar. May be ciliated. Line the central cavities of the brain and spinal column. Form permeable barrier between cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) in cavities and tissue fluid bathing CNS cells.
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7
Q

What is the difference between neurone and neuroglia?

A

Neurones are like the communication network of the body whereas neuroglia facilitate the functioning of the communication network.

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8
Q

Neurons

A

Nerve cell. Structural units of nervous system. Large, highly specialised cells that conduct impulses. Extreme longevity. Amitotic (division of cells without mitosis). High metabolic rate so requires continuous supply of oxygen and glucose. All have cell body and one or more processes.
Contains a cell body (soma), dendrites (receive information), axon (only 1 per neurone, transmit stimulus), axon terminal.

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9
Q

How is an electrical impulse passed along a somatic motor neurone and an autonomic motor neurone?

A

Somatic- Spinal cord -> through myelinated motor neurons -> ACh -> effector
(ACh: contraction of skeletal muscle)

Autonomic- Spinal cord -> through myelinated preganglionic neurone -> to autonomic ganglion ->through unmyelinated postganglionic neurone -> ACh -> effector
(ACh: contraction of smooth or cardiac muscle, stimulation or inhibition of glandular secretion)

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10
Q

Membrane potential

A

The charge is negative inside the cell and positive outside the cell. There are more NA+ ions outside and K+ inside.

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11
Q

Resting membrane potential

A

Requires
1- intact cell (semi-permeable) membrane
2- ionic concentration gradients and ionic permeability’s (particularly K+ ions)
3- over the long term: metabolic processes

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12
Q

Ionic concentration gradients

A

Intracellular
- 12M Na+
- 125mM K+
- 5mM Cl-
- 108mM anions

Extracellular
- 120mM Na+
- 5mM K+
- 125mM Cl-

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13
Q

Ek (resting potential for ideal membrane)
(don’t really need to know- not clear on the ppt)

A

Nernst equation is used to calculate Ek.
The membrane potential at room temperature is calculates to be -58mV.
Reducing K+ concentration gradient reduces the electrical gradient to balance. Ideally the membrane is impermeable to Na+ ions and therefore changing concentration will not effect Em.
Em is usually less negative than Ek.
This is because the cell membrane is not completely impermeable to Na+ so Na+ moves in and there is K+ leakage so K+ moves out. These movements depolarise the membrane potential.

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14
Q

Na+/K+ pump

A

For every 2 K+ ions that are pumped into the cell 3 Na+ ions are pumped out. This requires ATP. ATP -> ADP + Pi

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15
Q

Transport across membranes

A

Diffusion
Facilitated diffusion
- ligand gated e.g. Cl- Ca2+
- mechanically gated e.g. Ca2+ Na+
- voltage gated e.g. Na+ K+
Active transport

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16
Q

Potential change

A

Neural communication involves two kinds of potential change
- Action potentials- long distance
- Graded- short distance
- Post synaptic
- End-plate
- Receptor potentials

17
Q

Action potential

A

Resting potential at -70mV. Impulse sent along neurone and this change in voltage causes the voltage gated Na+ channels to open allowing Na+ ions to enter the cell. This causes depolarisation and changes the potential of the cell to +45mV at which the Na+ channels close and voltage gated K+ channels open allowing K+ ions to leave the cell. Repolarisation occurs but the K+ channels are slow to close meaning there is a hyperpolarisation.
If the initial depolarisation does not reach -40mV then no action potential will be carried along the neurone.

18
Q

What initially depolarises neurones to open the voltage gates Na+ channels

A
  1. Synaptic transmission: excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs)
  2. Generator (receptor) potentials (sensory neurones)
  3. Inherent properties
  4. Experimental
19
Q

Signal transmission

A

Neurone depolarises at the site of the stimulus.
the movements of this depolarisation will more the signal down the neurone.

20
Q

Refractory period

A

Absolute refractory period
- Neurone cannot be re-stimulated
- Na+ channels inactivated

Relative refractory period
- Greater stimulation required to trigger action potential
- K+ still activated

21
Q

Nodes of Ranvier and saltatory conduction

A

Nodes of Ranvier are gaps between adjacent Schwann cells. In a myelinated axon the depolarising current during an action potential at one node of Ranvier spreads along the interior of the axon to another node of Ranvier. Therefore the action potential jumps from node to node as it travels along the axon. This speeds up rate of transmission of the impulse.

22
Q

Reflex: simple nerve circuit

A

Rapid response
- automated
Signal only goes to spinal cord
- no higher level processing
Advantages
- no need to think or make decisions about
- blinking
- balance
- pupil dilation
- startle

23
Q

Reflex arc

A

All reflex arcs have at leats 5 parts
1- a sensory receptor
2- an afferent path (sensory neurone)
3- an integration centre (spinal cord)
4- an efferent path (motor neurone)
5- an effector (muscle)

24
Q

Identify the incorrect statement
1- The soma contains the nucleus and the organelles
2- Dendrites receive information from other nerve cells
3- The axons carries information that will be relayed to another cell/neuron
4- The neurotransmitters released only affect voltage gated ion channels in the post synaptic membrane

A

4

25
Q

Motor nerve fibres carry signals
1- From the CNS to the spinal cord
2- From the CNS to the muscles
3- From the muscles to the CNS
4- From the glands to the CNS

A

2

26
Q

Which of the following does not describe a unique feature of neurones.
1- They don’t divide
2- Do not change once matured
3- They don’t repair if damaged, dead, or worn out
4- Variation in organelle composition

A

??

27
Q

Which of the following is the correct statement regarding action potentials?
1- Action potentials are always propagates towards the cell body
2- Action potentials can vary in amplitude and duration
3- The strength of an action potential does not weaken towards the terminal synapse
4- A low frequency of firing is linked to a strong stimulus
5- Resting membrane potential is maintained at +70mN in a neurone

A

3

28
Q

Demyelination is most likely to have occurred in those with
1- Autoimmune disease
2- Bacterial infection
3- Seizures
4- Meningitis
5- Drug abuse

A

5