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Anatomy of the Nervous System. Nervous and Endocrine Systems work together to maintain homeostasis Nervous System Electrical signals FAST – milliseconds.

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Presentation on theme: "Anatomy of the Nervous System. Nervous and Endocrine Systems work together to maintain homeostasis Nervous System Electrical signals FAST – milliseconds."— Presentation transcript:

1 Anatomy of the Nervous System

2 Nervous and Endocrine Systems work together to maintain homeostasis Nervous System Electrical signals FAST – milliseconds Short activity duration Specific! Endocrine System Chemical signals –Hormones Slow– sec. to hours Longer activity duration Travels through blood stream – not specific!

3 Functioning of the NS Nerve impulses travel in 2 directions Each direction uses a different set of nerves –Motor Nerves – Efferent (descending) Take info AWAY from brain –Sensory Nerves – Afferent (ascending) Take info TO the brain The integrative function analyzes the sensory data and produces a response.

4 Nervous Tissue Neurons (nerve cells) –Cell Body –Dendrites –Axon Myelinated vs. Unmyelinated Saltatory impulses

5 Nervous Tissue (cont.) Neuroglial Cells (“nerve glue”) –Hold the structure of the nervous system together.

6 4 types of Neuroglial Cells Microglial – Small, phagocytic cells - go to injury/clean and engulf debris Astrocytes – stars – hold neurons together. Form bridges between neurons and capillaries.

7 Neuroglial Cells continued.. Oligodendroglial – produce myelin sheath (protection) over neurons in CNS Ependymal – line cavities, lubricates and protects. Produces and moves cerebrospinal fluid

8 A detailed look at the structure of a neuron… Motor Neuron

9 And a sensory neuron…

10 What is the importance of the myelin sheath? What are nodes of Ranvier?

11 Homework for WEDNESDAY Read 237-244 in your book Do concept check questions on page 237! We may have a short reading quiz tomorrow to check in!!!

12 Nerve Impulses Axon membrane is POLARIZED when not active (at rest). –Potassium ions inside axon –Sodium ions outside axon –Negative organic ions inside

13 Action potential = nerve impulse –Change in polarity flows down the axon’s membrane. –Depolarization – Na ions move into axon –Repolarization – K ions move out of axon

14 How does the info pass from one neuron to another??? Through the SYNAPSE –Gap between one neuron’s axon (synaptic knob) and another’s dendrite –This gap is called the SYNAPTIC CLEFT Neurotransmitters (like acetylcholine and norepinephrine) pass the impulse from one neuron to the next

15 Neurological Disorders Neurotransmitter imbalances –Huntington’s disease – nervous system degeneration (GABA dysfunction in brain) –Parkinson’s Disease – dopamine deficiency, tremors, unblinking expression –Alzheimer’s Disease – loss of neurons that use ACh

16 Reflex Arc Unconscious motor response to a sensory stimulus. Stimulation of sensory receptors evokes APs that are conducted into spinal cord. –Synapses with association neuron, which synapses with somatic motor neuron. Conducts impulses to muscle and stimulates a reflex contraction. –Brain is not directly involved. Figure 8-28


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