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Nervous System

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Nervous System A basic overview Mrs. S. Taylor – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Nervous System


1
Nervous System
  • A basic overview

Mrs. S. Taylor
2
What does it do?
  • Allows us to
  • Think, feel, remember, move, being aware of the
    world around us
  • How?
  • Sensory receptors bring messages to the Central
    Nervous System(CNS) from both inside and outside
    sources.
  • CNS determines course of action and sends a
    message out to where it need to go so that the
    action can happen.

3
So... it is the master control?
  • Yep, it sure is and it is also our means of
    communication, too.
  • How does it work? Well....
  • Sensory input monitoring stimuli
  • This is all the data the receptors collect... you
    know... pain, pressure, temperature... that sort
    of stuff
  • Integration interpretation of sensory input
  • The data is brought together to create memories,
    sensations, produce thoughts.. stuff like that
    and then we make decisions about it, either
    consciously or subconsciously
  • Motor output response to stimuli
  • This is how we act on what we have sensed... like
    running to the restroom, jerking our hand back
    from a hot stove...

4
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5
Okay... so what are the parts?
  • The major players are the Nerve cells
    (technically called the neurons) that use
    electrochemical impulses (nerve impulses) to pass
    messages from one to another and to the effectors
    (the things that respond to the message)?
  • They make up the brain, spinal cord, motor
    nerves, sensory nerves... anything that sends and
    receives messages in us has a nerve.

6
1st major classification
  • Are they of the CNS (central nervous system)?
  • Brain and spinal cord
  • Integration and command center
  • Or are they the PNS (peripheral nervous system)?
  • Paired spinal and cranial nerves (peripheral
    nerves)?
  • Carries messages to and from the spinal cord and
    brain

7
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8
The PNS is further divided
  • Sensory (afferent) division
  • Sensory afferent fibers carry impulses from
    skin, skeletal muscles, and joints to the brain
  • Visceral afferent fibers transmit impulses from
    visceral organs to the brain
  • Motor (efferent) division
  • Transmits impulses from the CNS to effector organs

9
The motor division gets to do it again....
  • Somatic nervous system
  • Conscious control of skeletal muscles
    (Voluntary)?
  • Autonomic nervous system (ANS)?
  • Regulates smooth muscle, cardiac muscle, and
    glands (Involuntary)?
  • Divisions (once again...-)?
  • Sympathetic- prepares the body for
    energy-expending, stressful, or emergency
    actions
  • Parasympathetic- used in ordinary restful
    conditions, and returning to that after the
    sympathetic division has had its way.

10
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11
Okay Okay Okay... we got that, but what does the
nerve look like?
  • Well... it has three main parts
  • Dendrites
  • Cell body
  • Axon
  • And some ancillary parts too
  • Nodes of Ranvier
  • Schwann cells the Neurilemma
  • Myelin sheaths

12
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13
Let's start with the main parts
  • Dendrites
  • They are the short, tapering, and diffusely
    branched processes (extensions)?
  • receive the messages from where ever (sensory
    receptors, other nerves...) and carries them to
    the Cell body
  • Axon
  • It is the slender processes of uniform diameter
    arising from the hillock (If long called a nerve
    fiber)?
  • Typically only one and it is usually unbranched
  • Takes messages from the Cell body to the next
    stop (dendrites or the effector)?

14
So, what about the Cell body?
  • Contains the nucleus and a nucleolus,
    mitchondria, gogli apparatus... those sorts of
    things
  • Is the focal point for the outgrowth of neuronal
    processes (Those things we just finished talking
    about)?
  • Has no centrioles (hence its amitotic nature
    that means it can't divide to make new cells)?
  • Has well-developed Nissl bodies (kind of like
    rough ER)?
  • Contains an axon hillock cone-shaped area from
    which axons arise

15
The Ancillaries? First up... the Myelin sheaths
  • Whitish, fatty (protein-lipoid), segmented sheath
    around most long axons
  • It functions to
  • Protect the axon
  • Electrically insulate fibers from one another
  • Increase the speed of nerve impulse transmission
  • It is created by Schwann cells in PNS
  • Can repair the axon if damages
  • It is created by oligodendrocytes in the CNS
  • Axons usually cannot repair

16
Schwann cells?
  • A Schwann cell
  • Envelopes an axon in a trough
  • Encloses the axon with its plasma membrane
  • Has concentric layers of membrane that make up
    the myelin sheath
  • Neurilemma remaining nucleus and cytoplasm of a
    Schwann cell

17
So, what are these node things?
  • The Nodes of Ranvier (AKS Neurofibral nodes)?
  • Gaps in the myelin sheath between adjacent
    Schwann cells

18
So, what if the axon is short?
  • It is called unmyelinated.
  • A Schwann cell surrounds nerve fibers but coiling
    does not take place
  • In the brain they are called gray matter (the
    myelinated are called white matter)?
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