1 / 35

The Nervous System

The Nervous System. Nervous System: Hank. Word Parts. Ax- : axis Dendr-: tree Funi-: small cord or fiber Gangli-: swelling -lemm: peel or rind Mening-: membrane Peri-: around. Plex-: interwoven Sens-: feeling Syn-: together Ventr-: belly or stomach Moto-: moving. Vocabulary.

dympna
Download Presentation

The Nervous System

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Nervous System Nervous System: Hank

  2. Word Parts • Ax- : axis • Dendr-: tree • Funi-: small cord or fiber • Gangli-: swelling • -lemm: peel or rind • Mening-: membrane • Peri-: around • Plex-: interwoven • Sens-: feeling • Syn-: together • Ventr-: belly or stomach • Moto-: moving

  3. Vocabulary • Afferent: conducting toward the center • Efferent: conducting away from the center • Effectors: muscles, skin and glands • Nerveimpulse: transmission of information in the form of electrochemical signals • Neurons: nerve cells • Neurotransmitters: chemicals that carry nerve impulses • Acetylcholine, norepinephrine, epinephrine, dopamine, serotonin, endorphins • Synapse: the gap between 2 communicating neurons • Schwanncells: produce the myelin sheath

  4. The Nervous System • Functions: • Sensory input – senses changes • Integration – interprets changes • Motor output – reacts to changes

  5. Divisions of the nervous system • CNS: Central Nervous System • Brain & spinal cord: interprets incoming information • PNS: Peripheral Nervous System • Nerves that branch to the rest of the body

  6. Types of Nervous Tissue • Neuroglia: support, insulate and nourish neurons • Outnumber neurons • Can divide (neurons cannot)

  7. Neuroglia 1. Microglial cells: support neurons, phagocytize bacterial cells and debris and form scars: found throughout the CNS 2. Oligodendrocytes: provide the myelin sheath around axons: found along nerve fibers 3. Astrocytes: provide structure and regulate concentrations of nutrients: found between neurons 4. Ependymal cells: form a membrane that covers the parts of the brain and spinal cord

  8. Neurons • Send signals in only one direction: do not touch each other • Three parts: • Dendrites – detect impulses • Cell body – interpret impulses • Axon – conduct impulses • Covered with a myelin sheath (fatty material)

  9. Different Neuron Structures • Multipolar: (brain or spinal cord) have one axon and many dendrites • Bipolar: (eyes, nose and ears) have one axon and one dendrite • Unipolar: one end goes to the CNS and one end goes to the PNS

  10. Types of Neurons • Sensory: (afferent) :transmit impulses from the PNS to the brain or spinal cord • Unipolar or bipolar 2. Interneurons: only in the CNS • Transmit impulses from one part of CNS to another part of the CNS • Multipolar 3. Motor: (efferent): transmit impulses out of the brain to effectors (muscles and glands) • multipolar

  11. Nerve Physiology • How is a signal transmitted down a neuron? • Dendrites Cell Body Axon • NerveImpulse: an electrical signal that travels along an axon • Restingpotential: a neuron has a (+) charge outside the cell and a (-) charge inside the cell • resting potential

  12. Action Potential • Resting neuron gets excited • Sodium channels open, allowing Na+ to enter & make the inside of the cell (+) & outside (-) • The impulse passes over the axon • Na+ channels close & potassium channels open, releasing K+ • Neuron is at rest again • Known as the Na+/K+ pump

  13. nerve impulse

  14. Connections Between Neurons • This is an extra slide and is not in the notes • When an impulse reaches the end of an axon: • Calcium channels open & Ca+ causing the release of neurotransmitters • Neurotransmitters diffuse across the synapse & bind to receptors on the dendrites of the next neuron initiating a new impulse

  15. Synapses • Synapses

  16. The Brain • TheBrain: The Control center of the body • Greymatter: non-myelinated axons • Whitematter: myelinated axons 1. The cerebrum or cerebral cortex • Largest part of the brain • Controls sensory and motor functions • Highly wrinkled to increase surface area

  17. Cortex Lobes • FrontalLobe: reasoning, planning, speech, movement, emotions, language, memory, judgment, and problem solving • ParietalLobe: hand-eye coordination, orientation, touch, smell, speech and taste • TemporalLobe: emotions, smelling, tasting, perception, memory, music, aggressiveness and sexual behavior • OccipitalLobe: visual processing and recognition

  18. Diencephalon 2. Diencephalon: between the cerebral hemispheres • Thalamus: relay station for sensory impulses (except smell) • Interprets pain, touch and temperature • Hypothalamus: heart rate, body temperature, blood pressure, hunger, thirst, weight, digestion, sleep and consciousness • Hippocampus: short to long-term memory • Limbic System: regulates emotion and memory

  19. Brain Stem 3. BrainStem: connects the brain to the spinal cord • Midbrain: reflex centers • Pons: relays sensory impulses from PNS to brain • MedullaOblongata: every nerve passes through this • Cardiac controls • Respiration controls • Vasomotor controls • Coughing, sneezing swallowing and vomiting

  20. Cerebellum 4. Cerebellum: communicates with other parts of the brain • Interprets: • Skeletal movements • Voluntary muscle movements • Loss of equilibrium

  21. Right or Left Brained?

  22. CNS: spinal cord • Spinalcord: the slender nerve column that passes downward from the brain into the vertebral canal • Consists of 31 segments that give rise to spinal nerves • Centralcanal: contains cerebrospinal fluid

  23. Peripheral Nervous System • Nerves that carry messages to & from CNS • Afferent Division (Sense receptors) • sight, hearing, balance, smell, touch • Carry messages toward the spinal cord & brain • Efferent Division (Motor nerves) • Travel from the spinal cord & brain to muscles, telling them how to respond

  24. Peripheral Nervous System • SomaticNervousSystem: Voluntary pathways • AutonomicNervousSystem: Involuntary pathways • Sympatheticnerves: stress, crisis • Increase heart rate, dilate airways and blood vessels, stimulate adrenaline release, inhibit digestive system • Parasympatheticnerves: relaxation • Slow down heart rate, lower blood pressure, stimulate digestive system

  25. Cranial Nerves – PNS~12 pairs in the head & neck • Olfactory • smell • Optic • vision • Oculomotor • eyes • Trochlear • eyes • Trigeminal • face + nose + mouth • Abducens • eye roll • Facial • Taste, Face expression • Vestibulocochlear • Hearing & balance • Glossopharyngeal • Throat control • Vagus • Mouth, digestion • Accessory • neck • Hypoglossal • tongue

  26. Nervous System Disorders • Poliomyelitis : viral infection that may lead to paralysis • Cerebralpalsy: affects hearing, learning, sight, speech and brain function • Parkinson’sdisease: leads to shaking and difficulty walking or moving • MultipleSclerosis (MS): Myelin sheaths are damaged so nerves don’t communicate correctly • Epilepsy: Characterized by seizers • Dyslexia: reading disorder where interpreting and processing is diminished • Tay-SachsDisease: inherited disease of the nervous system

  27. Nervous System Disorders • Rabies – viral infection: convulsions, excitability, loss of sensation • Dementia – Loss of brain function that affects thinking, language, judgment, memory and behavior • Concussion: Violent jarring or shaking that results in a disturbance of brain function • Contusion: Bruise to the brain caused by injury • Cerebraledema: Swelling of the brain usually caused by traumatic injury

  28. Brain Dysfunctions • Cerebrovascular accidents (Stroke): blood flow to the brain stops and brain cells die • Alzheimer’sDisease: brain function gradually diminishes over time

More Related