honors anatomy & physiology chapter 11 fundamentals of the nervous system

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HONORS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY CHAPTER 11 Fundamentals of the Nervous System

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Page 1: HONORS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY CHAPTER 11 Fundamentals of the Nervous System

HONORS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGYCHAPTER 11

Fundamentals of the

Nervous System

Page 2: HONORS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY CHAPTER 11 Fundamentals of the Nervous System

Functions of the Nervous System

3 overlapping functions:1. Sensory input

monitor changes in & outside of body information gathered called sensory input which is

carried to #2 on afferent nerves

2. Integration processing & interpreting sensory input

3. Motor output activation of effector organs (muscles or glands) to

cause a response called motor output which is carried on efferent nerrves

Page 3: HONORS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY CHAPTER 11 Fundamentals of the Nervous System

Divisions of the Nervous System

1. Central Nervous System(CNS) Brain Spinal Cord

2. Peripheral Nervous System (PNS) Sensory neurons: specialized endings to detect a

particular sense Motor neurons:

Somatic: CNS skeletal muscle (voluntary) Autonomic:1. Sympathetic2. Parasympatheric

Page 4: HONORS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY CHAPTER 11 Fundamentals of the Nervous System

Organization of the Nervous System

Page 5: HONORS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY CHAPTER 11 Fundamentals of the Nervous System

Histology of Nervous Tissue

very cellular, ~20% extracellular material2 cell types:1. Neurons

excitable (respond to stimuli) able to transmit electrical impulses (action

potentials)

2. Neuroglia: supporting cells

Page 6: HONORS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY CHAPTER 11 Fundamentals of the Nervous System
Page 7: HONORS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY CHAPTER 11 Fundamentals of the Nervous System

Parts of Neuron: Cell Body

contains nucleus, cytoplasm, typical organelles,

+ Nissl bodies clusters of RER make materials

for: growth of neuron regenerate

damaged axons in PNS

Page 8: HONORS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY CHAPTER 11 Fundamentals of the Nervous System

Dendrites

“little trees”input portion of

neuronusually, short,

tapering, highly branched

their cytoplasm contains Nissl bodies, mitochondria

Page 9: HONORS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY CHAPTER 11 Fundamentals of the Nervous System

Axon

propagates action potentials another neuron muscle fiber gland cell

Page 10: HONORS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY CHAPTER 11 Fundamentals of the Nervous System

Parts of an Axon

joins cell body @ cone-shaped elevation: axon hillock

part of axon closest to hillock = initial segment

jct of axon hillock & initial segment where action potential arises so is called the trigger zone

Page 11: HONORS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY CHAPTER 11 Fundamentals of the Nervous System

Parts of an Axon

axoplasm: cytoplasm of an axonaxolemma: plasma membrane of axonaxon collaterals: side branches along length

of axon (most @ 90°)axon terminals: axon divides into many fine

processes

Page 12: HONORS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY CHAPTER 11 Fundamentals of the Nervous System

Synapse

site of communication between 2 neurons or between a neuron & effector cell

synaptic end bulbs: tips of some axon terminals swell into bulb-shaped structures

synaptic vesicles: store neurotransmitter many neurons have >1 neurotransmitter,

each with different effects on postsynaptic cell

Page 13: HONORS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY CHAPTER 11 Fundamentals of the Nervous System
Page 14: HONORS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY CHAPTER 11 Fundamentals of the Nervous System

Types of Neurons

Functional Classification

Structural Classification

SensoryInterneuronsMotor

use # processes extending from cell body

1. Multipolar neurons2. Bipolar neurons3. Unipolar neurons

Page 15: HONORS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY CHAPTER 11 Fundamentals of the Nervous System

Multipolar Neurons

several dendrites with 1 axonincludes most neurons in brain & spinal cord

Page 16: HONORS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY CHAPTER 11 Fundamentals of the Nervous System

Bipolar Neuron

1 main dendrite & 1 axonretina, inner ear, olfactory area of brain

Page 17: HONORS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY CHAPTER 11 Fundamentals of the Nervous System

Unipolar Neuron

are sensory neurons that begin in embryo as bipolar

during development axon & dendrite fuse then divide into 2 branches (both have characteristic structure & function of an axon)

1 branch ends with dendrites (out of CNS)2nd branch ends in axon terminal (in CNS)cell bodies of most found in ganglia

Page 18: HONORS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY CHAPTER 11 Fundamentals of the Nervous System

Unipolar Neuron

Page 19: HONORS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY CHAPTER 11 Fundamentals of the Nervous System

Purkinje Cells

found in cerebellum

Page 20: HONORS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY CHAPTER 11 Fundamentals of the Nervous System

Pyramidal Cells

in cerebral cortex of brain

Page 21: HONORS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY CHAPTER 11 Fundamentals of the Nervous System

Neuroglia (Glia)

~50% vol of CNS“glue”do not generate or propagate action

potentialsmultiply & divide in mature nervous systemsglioma:

brain tumors derived from glial cells very malignant, grow rapidly

Page 22: HONORS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY CHAPTER 11 Fundamentals of the Nervous System

Glial Cells of the CNS

1. ASTROCYTES2. OLIGODENDROCYTES3. MICROGLIA4. EPENDYMAL CELLS

Page 23: HONORS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY CHAPTER 11 Fundamentals of the Nervous System

Astrocytes

star-shapedlargest & most numerous of glial cellsfunctions:1. physically support neurons2. assist in blood-brain-barrier (bbb)3. in embryo: regulate growth, migration, &

interconnections between neurons4. help maintain appropriate chemical

environment for propagation of action potentials

Page 24: HONORS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY CHAPTER 11 Fundamentals of the Nervous System
Page 25: HONORS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY CHAPTER 11 Fundamentals of the Nervous System

Oligodendrocytes

“few trees”smaller & fewer branches than astrocytesFunctions:1. form & maintain myelin sheath on axons in

CNS2. 1 oligo. myelinates many axons

Page 26: HONORS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY CHAPTER 11 Fundamentals of the Nervous System

Microglia

small cells with slender processes giving off many spine-like projections

function:1. phagocytes

remove cellular debris made during normal development

remove microbes & damaged nervous tissue

Page 27: HONORS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY CHAPTER 11 Fundamentals of the Nervous System

Ependymal Cells

single layer of cuboidal to columnar cellsciliated & have microvillifunction:1. line ventricles of brain & central canal of

spinal cord2. produce, monitor, & assist in circulation of

cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)3. form bbb

Page 28: HONORS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY CHAPTER 11 Fundamentals of the Nervous System
Page 29: HONORS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY CHAPTER 11 Fundamentals of the Nervous System

Neuroglial Cells of the PNS

Schwann cellsSatellite cells

Page 30: HONORS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY CHAPTER 11 Fundamentals of the Nervous System

Schwann Cells

functions:1. myelinate axons in PNS

1 Schwann cell myelinates 1 axon

2. participate in axon regeneration

Page 31: HONORS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY CHAPTER 11 Fundamentals of the Nervous System

Satellite Cells

flat cells that surround cell bodies of neurons in PNS ganglia

functions:1. structural support2. regulate exchange of materials between

neuronal cell bodies & interstitial fluid

Page 32: HONORS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY CHAPTER 11 Fundamentals of the Nervous System

Myelination

myelin sheath: made up of multilayered lipid & protein (plasma membrane) covering

function:1. electrically insulates axon2. increases speed of nerve impulses

Page 33: HONORS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY CHAPTER 11 Fundamentals of the Nervous System

Myelinated & Unmyelinated Axons

Page 34: HONORS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY CHAPTER 11 Fundamentals of the Nervous System
Page 35: HONORS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY CHAPTER 11 Fundamentals of the Nervous System

Nodes of Ranvier

gaps in myelin sheath1 Schwann cell wraps axon between nodes

of Ranvier

Page 36: HONORS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY CHAPTER 11 Fundamentals of the Nervous System

Myelin

amount increases from birth to maturity infant‘s responses slower & less coordinated

as older child or adult in part because myelination is a work in progress thru infancy

Page 37: HONORS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY CHAPTER 11 Fundamentals of the Nervous System
Page 38: HONORS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY CHAPTER 11 Fundamentals of the Nervous System

Demyelination

loss of myelin sheathsee in disorders:

multiple sclerosis Tay-Sachs side effect of radiation therapy & chemotherapy

Page 39: HONORS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY CHAPTER 11 Fundamentals of the Nervous System

Gray Matter of the Nervous System

contains: neuronal cell bodies dendrites unmyelinated axons axon terminals neuroglia

Page 40: HONORS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY CHAPTER 11 Fundamentals of the Nervous System

White Matter of the Nervous System

composed of: myelinated axons

Page 41: HONORS ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY CHAPTER 11 Fundamentals of the Nervous System