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The%20Nervous%20system

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Title: The%20Nervous%20system


1
The Nervous system
  • The nerve cell is the basic unit of communication
    in the vertebrate nervous system

2
Three Classes of neurons
  • The Neural circuit consists of
  • Sensory neurons
  • receptor for stimulus
  • Interneuron
  • integrate signals
  • Motor neuron
  • transfer signal to effector (muscle)

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Anatomy of a Neuron
  • Cell body functional portion
  • Dendrites short extensions that receive signals
  • Axon long extension that transmits impulses

5
How does a neuron hold and move info?
  • A neuron at rest has a voltage difference across
    the plasma membrane called a resting voltage
    potential
  • An action potential is when this charge across
    the membrane is briefly switched
  • The action potential moves down the membrane at a
    rapid pace.
  • Ap can move faster over mylenated portions is
    called saltatory conduction

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How does a signal move from one neuron to another?
  • A synaptic cleft divides 2 neurons
  • The AP will not move across the synaptic cleft
  • Neuro transmitters are released by the signal
    cell to the receiver cell
  • Move by diffusion

9
Types of chemical synapse
  • Acetylcholine neuromuscular junctions, glands,
    brain and spinal cord
  • Norepinepherine affects brain regions concerned
    with emotions, dreaming

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Paths of information flow
  • Signals between the brain and spinal cord move to
    the body regions by nerves
  • Sensory nerves move a signal towards the brain
    and spinal cord
  • Motor neurons move a signal from the brain or
    spinal cord to the body

12
Divisions of the nervous System
  • Central nervous system
  • CNS
  • Is the brain and spinal cord
  • Peripheral nervous system
  • PNS
  • all nerves that carry signals to and from the CNS

13
Parts of the PNS
  • Sensory Division carries info to the brain and
    spinal cord.
  • Motor Division carries info from the brain to
    the bodies effectors (things that do the work)

14
The Motor division of the PNS has 2 divisions
  • Somatic nerves relay commands to and from
    skeletal muscle
  • Voluntary control
  • Autonomic nerves send signals to and from smooth
    muscles
  • Involuntary control
  • Sympathetic
  • Parasympathetic

15
The autonomic divisions
  • Parasympathetic
  • slow down the body activity when the body is not
    under stress
  • Rest and digest
  • Sympathetic
  • increase overall body activity during times of
    stress, excitement or danger
  • fight or flight response
  • hormone epinephrine

16
Sympathetic and Parasympathetic
  • Are Antagonistic
  • Work towards the automatic, subconscious
    maintenance of homeostasis.

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Components of the CNS
  • Spinal cord
  • 31 pair of spinal nerves
  • Grey matter
  • White matter
  • Controls some reflex actions like bladder emptying
  • Brain parts
  • Hindbrain
  • medulla oblongata
  • cerebellum
  • pons
  • Midbrain
  • Forebrain
  • cerebrum
  • thalamus
  • hypothalamus

19
Other parts of the CNS
  • The two cerebral hemispheres communicate through
    the corpus collosum
  • left verbal skills
  • right nonverbal skills such as music math,
    abstract
  • Brain cavities and Canals
  • cerebrospinal fluid surrounds and fills in
    cavities in the brain
  • Blood Brain barrier- controls what moves into the
    brain. Will prevent infections.

20
Our state of consciousness
  • The CNS governs sleeping, dozing, daydreaming and
    full alertness
  • neurons of the reticular activating system
    control the changing levels of consciousness by
    releasing serotonin.

21
Limbic system
  • Involved in both memory and emotion.
  • Is involved with behavior.
  • Odors pass through this system and may influence
    or behavior and emotions.

22
Memory
  • Association is the linkage of information to
    structural and chemical changes
  • short term- few bits lasts a couple of hours
  • Long term- permanent and limitless
  • The most important info goes rapidly into long
    term storage
  • memory is stored in a form resistant to
    degradation
  • Possibly caused by changes in synapses.

23
Tips on studying
  • Concentrate on what you study.
  • Minimize interference.
  • Study takes time.
  • Break material into smaller portions.
  • Rephrase materials in your own words.
  • Test yourself to see what you know.

24
Disorders of the nervous system
  • Trauma
  • Infections
  • Transmission and synaptic defects.
  • Abnormal growth

25
Sensory Reception
  • If a tree falls in the woods with no one to
    listen does it make a sound?

26
Receptors
  • Are the actual structures that respond to our
    environment.
  • Each receptor will respond to a different signal.
  • Essentially translators, they translate an energy
    into one that can be perceived by the brain.

27
Sensory systems consist of
  • Each system has 3 parts
  • 1) sensory receptors.
  • 2) pathway to the brain.
  • 3) region of the brain that recognizes this
    section.

28
Types of sensory Receptors
  • Chemoreceptors
  • Mechanoreceptors
  • Thermoreceptors
  • Nociceptors
  • Photoreceptors
  • olfaction and taste
  • touch, stretch, hearing, equilibrium
  • radiant energy, infared
  • pain receptors
  • light

29
Sensory Pathways
  • If a receptor is stimulated enough it results in
    an action potential.
  • The action potential reaches the brain.
  • The stronger the stimulus the greater number of
    action potentials reach the brain.
  • Sensory adaptation is when the action potentials
    are reduced by a constant stimulus.
  • Certain receptors will not adapt.

30
Somatic sensations
  • Mechanoreceptors that respond to changes or
    constant pressure
  • Increase in temperature causes and increase in AP
  • Respond to intense stimulus on other receptors,
    cannot be ignored
  • Mechanoreceptors give measurement as to the
    location of all the muscles and bones in a given
    moment.
  • Touch Pressure
  • Temperature
  • Pain
  • Muscle sense

31
Limb position, length and tension
  • How do we know where we are at?

32
Referred pain
33
Taste and Smell
  • Gustation Taste
  • Receptors located on tongue, roof of mouth,
    throat and palate
  • Four tastes
  • sweet
  • sour
  • bitter
  • salty
  • Olfaction smell
  • detect chemicals
  • olfactory bulbs in brain interpret smell
  • smell is often combined with emotion

34
Taste
  • Taste Bud 25 cells
  • Taste hairs project into mouth
  • Hairs contain receptors
  • Categories
  • Sweet
  • Sour
  • Salty
  • bitter

35
Hearing
  • Acoustical receptors detect vibrations
  • The ear
  • In the organ of corti loudness is determined by
    The total number of cells that are stimulated
  • Pitch depends on frequency of vibration

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Balance
  • Vestibular apparatus
  • Closed system of fluid filled sacs
  • Contain otoliths that detect changes in
    orientation as well as acceleration
  • Overstimulation of the hair cells of the
    vestibular apparatus results in motion sickness

38
Vestibular apparatus
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The Eye
41
Structure of the eye
  • Outer sclera (white) (is all the way around)
  • Cornea (clear)
  • Pupil (opening to the back)
  • Lens (transparent)
  • Retina (back side has photoreceptors and support
    material)
  • Fovea has highest concentration of photoreceptors.

42
Regulating light amount
  • The iris adjusts to amount of light entering the
    eye.
  • The lens goes through accommodation to adjust
    lens curvature (as we age the lens cannot buldge
    enough to focus on a close object)

43
Light must reach the sensors by going through
neurons.
  • Outermost layer is pigmented to absorb light not
    absorbed by the sensors
  • Photoreceptors are in middle layer
  • Translucent neurons and ganglions are on top of
    the photoreceptors.

44
Production of Action Potentials by Rods and Cones
  • Within these cells flattened disks contain
    photopigment
  • When this protein absorbs light it changes
    conformation, if enough are activated they cause
    an action potential.
  • Rods contain rhodopsin and are most sensitive to
    dim light
  • Cones contain different pigments

45
Rods and Cones
  • Bright light tends to use more cones, 300x more
    sensitive
  • Dim light uses Rods and Rhodopsin, it is broken
    apart by light and must be remade (hence the 5-10
    minute wait to see in darker areas)

46
Signaling to visual perception
  • Photoreceptors are in the retina
  • When rods or cones are stimulated they send a
    signal to the brains visual cortex.
  • In the brain the final interpretation makes sense
    of sight

47
Problems with the Eyes
  • Retinal detachment retina separates form choroid
  • Cataracts lens becomes opaque
  • Color blindness Inability to distinguish
    colors, is a genetic disease, lacks specific
    types of cones

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The Endocrine system
  • The oldest method of control is using a signal
    molecule that moves from one part of the body to
    the other

50
The Endocrine System Regulates
  • Salt and water balance
  • Blood pressure
  • Stress responses
  • Digestion
  • Cellular metabolism
  • Production of RBCs
  • Growth and development

51
Location of Endocrine Glands
52
Hormones and other signal molecules
  • Hormones molecules secreted by glands into the
    blood that move to a nonadjacent target
  • Neurotransmitters act on a directly adjacent
    cell
  • Local signaling molecule act quickly and degrade
    quickly
  • Pheromones secreted by glands and target cells
    in other organisms

53
Signaling Mechanisms
  • Requirements
  • Cells that secrete the signal molecule are either
    within a gland or nervous tissue
  • The signal molecule
  • Steroid hormone (fat soluble will move through
    the plasma membrane)
  • Non steroid hormone (peptides and other molecules
    must bind to a receptor on the cell)
  • Target cell

54
Target cell activities
  • Different hormones activate different cellular
    response mechanisms
  • No all cells have receptors for all hormones

Three possible hormones
A cell with a single receptor on it
55
Characteristics of the Endocrine system
  • Each hormone acts only on certain cells
  • Cells respond only when they have receptors
  • Is slower than nervous system control
  • Endocrine and nervous system to interact with one
    another.

56
Interaction of Endocrine System and Nervous System
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Negative Control using Hormones
59
The pancrease an endocrine and an exocrine gland
  • Glucagon raises blood sugars, release of stores
    and AA metabolism
  • Insulin lowers blood sugars opposes glucagon
  • Somatostatin inhibits secretion of the above
    enzymes

60
Bracketing using hormones
61
Regulation of Blood Calcium concentration
  • Increase Calcium
  • Parathyroid Hormone removes calcium and
    phosphate from bone, increase absorption,
    retention of calcium in kidneys
  • Decrease of Calcium
  • Calcitonin

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Oxytocin and nursing, a cascade of events
  • At the end of pregnancy, Estrogen rise.
  • Uterus produces more oxytocin receptors
  • Fetus produces oxytocin, starts a cycle of
    material production of oxytocin
  • Oxytocin is a part of the neuroendocrine reflexes
    and will help in the smooth muscle contractions
    which cause the release of milk.

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