U3KA4 Flashcards

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1
Q

What is a neuron?

A

its a nerve cells that carries electrical signals throught the body.

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2
Q

What are the three main structures of a neuron?

A

dendrites, cell body and axon.

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3
Q

What does the dendrite do?

A

it receives signals from sense organs and other neurons.

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4
Q

What is the axon?

A

its a long fibre that transmits the electrical signal

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5
Q

What does the cell body contain?

A

the nucleus and other cell organelles.

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6
Q

What is the axon fibre surrounded by?

A

myelin sheath.

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7
Q

How does the myelin sheath help the axon of a neuron?

A

this insulates that axon and allows for faster transmission of signals down the axon.

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8
Q

When is the myelin sheath formed?

A

from birth to teenage years, this is why young toddlers have such poor reaction speeds and coordination.

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9
Q

What is the myelin sheath produced by?

A

glial cells, they also help support the neuron and keep it in place/

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10
Q

What is a synapse?

A

its a tiny gap between the end of one neuron and the dendrites of another.

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11
Q

How does the electrical signal pass through the synapse?

A

electrical signal travels down the axon fibre of the presynaptic neuron –> presynaptic knob –> neurotransmitter move to the surface of the prenysynaptic knob releasing it into the synaptic cleft –> cross on the membrane of the postnynaptic neuron and bind to complementary receptors

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12
Q

What is a presynaptic neuron?

A

the neuron before the synapse

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13
Q

Postsynaptic membrane receptors can be _____ or _____

A

excitatory or inhibitory

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14
Q

What does it mean when a postsynaptic receptor is excitatory?

A

they increase the chance of generating a signal in the neuron

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15
Q

what does it mean when a postsynaptic receptor is inhibitory?

A

they decrease the chance of generating a signal in the neuron.

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16
Q

What are the two ways to remove neurotransmitters?

A

reuptake and enzyme breakdown

17
Q

why must neurotransmitters be removed?

A

the postsynaptic would be continually stimulated transmitting the same signal permanently.

18
Q

How are neurotransmitters removed through reuptake?

A

they move back into the presynaptic neuron via channel proteins,

19
Q

How are neurotransmitters removed through enzyme breakdown?

A

enzymes in the synpatic cleft break down the neutransmitters.

20
Q

What does the threshold do?

A

they transmit impulses by a minimum number of neurons that only transmit signals when the stimulus is big enough.

21
Q

In a converging neural pathway, a series of ________ release s small amount of neurotransmitters. The combined effect of these neurotransmitters is enough to reach _____ and trigger an ______.

A

weak stimuli, threshold, impulse.

22
Q

Neurotransmitter can affect our cognisitive processing, ______, and _____. They control pathways that can affect feelings of ______, _____, _____, _____ and _______

A

mood, behaviour, sleep, hunger, aggression, coordination and memory.

23
Q

What are endorphins?

A

neurotransmitters that stimulate neurons involved in reducing the intesity of pain. they decrease stress and improve symptoms of depression/

24
Q

What is dopamine?

A

neurotransmitter that induces feelings of pleasure and reinforces particular behaviour by activating the reward pathway in the brain.

25
Q

What is the reward pathway?

A

its a pathway that responds to dopamine.

26
Q

When does the reward pathway activate?

A

when an individual engages in a behaviour that is beneficial to them, for example eating when hungry.

27
Q

What are the 4 main categories of drugs that are used to target neurotransmitters relate disorders?

A

agonists, antagonists, drugs that inhibit uptake and drugs that inhibit neurotransmitter breakdown enzymes.

28
Q

What are agonists?

A

chemicals that bind to and stimulate specific receptors mimicking the action of a neurotransmitter at a synapse.

29
Q

What are antagonists?

A

chemicals that bind to specific receptors blocking the action of a neurotransmitter at a synapse.

30
Q

What do drugs that inhibit reuptake do?

A

keep neurotransmitters in the synaptic cleft by preventing them from entering the channels in the presynaptic neuron

31
Q

What do drugs that inhibit breakdown enzymes do?

A

keep neurotransmitters in the synaptic cleft by inhibiting the enzymes that break them down.

32
Q

What are recreational drugs?

A

they are substances that are taken for a temporary physiological effect, not for a medical reason. They tamper with levels of neurotransmitters causing changes in mood, behaviour, perception and cognition.

33
Q

What does repeated use of recreational drugs cause?

A

addiction or tolerance.

34
Q

Why are recreational drugs addictive?

A

because it tends to stimulate the reward pathway in the brain.

35
Q

repeated use of _____ drugs cause very little stimulaton of a neural pathway.

A

antagonist

36
Q

repeated use of an _____ drug causes over-stimulation of a neural pathway.

A

agonist

37
Q

How does antagonist drugs cause addiction?

A

they block receptors of neurotransmitters that can cause negative sensations such as pain, in response the postsynaptic builds more receptors on its membrane, resulting in sensitisation. Which leads to addiction.

38
Q

How do agonist drugs cause tolerance?

A

they stimulate receptors of neurotransmitters that can cause positive feelings such as relaxation, in response the postsynaptic neuron reduces the number of receptors at the synapse resulting in desensitization which leads to tolerance.