204d ago

Untitled Flashcards Set

Nervous System Overview

  1. Central Nervous System (CNS): "Core control" – brain and spinal cord.

  2. Peripheral Nervous System (PNS): "Peripheral pathways" – connects CNS to the body.


Types of Neurons

  1. Sensory Neuron: "Senses signal" – carries info to CNS.

  2. Motor Neuron: "Motor moves" – sends commands to muscles/glands.

  3. Interneuron: "Internal link" – bridges sensory and motor neurons.


Parts of a Neuron

  1. Neuron: "Neural unit" – the basic nerve cell.

  2. Cell Body (Soma): "Support hub" – holds the nucleus.

  3. Dendrite: "Data branches" – receive signals.

  4. Axon: "Action line" – sends signals away.

  5. Myelin Sheath: "Speed layer" – speeds up signal transmission.

  6. Node of Ranvier: "Signal jump" – gaps in myelin for faster conduction.

  7. Axon Terminal (End Buttons): "Signal stop" – releases neurotransmitters.


Synaptic Transmission

  1. Synapse: "Signal space" – where neurons connect.

  2. Presynaptic Membrane: "Pre-release" – sends neurotransmitters.

  3. Postsynaptic Membrane: "Post-receive" – receives neurotransmitters.

  4. Synaptic Vesicle: "Signal pack" – stores neurotransmitters.

  5. Neurotransmitter: "Neural messenger" – chemical signal carrier.

  6. Reuptake: "Recycle it" – reabsorbs neurotransmitters.

  7. Enzymatic Deactivation: "Chemical cleanup" – breaks down neurotransmitters.


Neuron Activity

  1. Resting Potential: "Ready to fire" – neuron at rest.

  2. Action Potential: "Signal spike" – an electrical impulse.

  3. Depolarization: "Less negative" – signal activation phase.

  4. Hyperpolarization: "More negative" – inhibits firing.

  5. Threshold of Excitation: "Trigger point" – voltage needed to fire.

  6. All-or-None Law: "Full send or none" – fires completely or not at all.


Glial Cells (Support Cells)

  1. Astrocyte: "Star helper" – provides nutrients and cleans debris.

  2. Oligodendrocyte: "Many myelin maker" – creates myelin for CNS axons.

  3. Schwann Cell: "Single wrapper" – creates myelin for PNS axons.

  4. Microglia: "Tiny cleaners" – removes waste and fights invaders.


Chemical Processes

  1. Sodium-Potassium Pump: "Ion balancer" – maintains neuron charge.

  2. Ion Channel: "Selective gate" – allows ions to pass through.

  3. Electrostatic Pressure: "Charge attraction" – opposites attract, likes repel.

  4. Diffusion: "Spread out" – molecules move to lower concentration.


Receptors and Ligands

  1. Ligand: "Lock key" – binds to receptors.

  2. Ionotropic Receptor: "Fast gate" – directly opens ion channels.

  3. Metabotropic Receptor: "Signal relay" – triggers a slower chain reaction.

  4. G-Protein: "Message helper" – relays receptor signals.


Synaptic Potentials

  1. Excitatory Postsynaptic Potential (EPSP): "Go signal" – excites neuron to fire.

  2. Inhibitory Postsynaptic Potential (IPSP): "Stop signal" – inhibits neuron from firing.


Integration

  1. Neural Integration: "Sum it up" – combines inputs to decide firing.This process is crucial for determining whether the neuron reaches the threshold potential necessary for action potential generation.


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Untitled Flashcards Set

Nervous System Overview

  1. Central Nervous System (CNS): "Core control" – brain and spinal cord.

  2. Peripheral Nervous System (PNS): "Peripheral pathways" – connects CNS to the body.


Types of Neurons

  1. Sensory Neuron: "Senses signal" – carries info to CNS.

  2. Motor Neuron: "Motor moves" – sends commands to muscles/glands.

  3. Interneuron: "Internal link" – bridges sensory and motor neurons.


Parts of a Neuron

  1. Neuron: "Neural unit" – the basic nerve cell.

  2. Cell Body (Soma): "Support hub" – holds the nucleus.

  3. Dendrite: "Data branches" – receive signals.

  4. Axon: "Action line" – sends signals away.

  5. Myelin Sheath: "Speed layer" – speeds up signal transmission.

  6. Node of Ranvier: "Signal jump" – gaps in myelin for faster conduction.

  7. Axon Terminal (End Buttons): "Signal stop" – releases neurotransmitters.


Synaptic Transmission

  1. Synapse: "Signal space" – where neurons connect.

  2. Presynaptic Membrane: "Pre-release" – sends neurotransmitters.

  3. Postsynaptic Membrane: "Post-receive" – receives neurotransmitters.

  4. Synaptic Vesicle: "Signal pack" – stores neurotransmitters.

  5. Neurotransmitter: "Neural messenger" – chemical signal carrier.

  6. Reuptake: "Recycle it" – reabsorbs neurotransmitters.

  7. Enzymatic Deactivation: "Chemical cleanup" – breaks down neurotransmitters.


Neuron Activity

  1. Resting Potential: "Ready to fire" – neuron at rest.

  2. Action Potential: "Signal spike" – an electrical impulse.

  3. Depolarization: "Less negative" – signal activation phase.

  4. Hyperpolarization: "More negative" – inhibits firing.

  5. Threshold of Excitation: "Trigger point" – voltage needed to fire.

  6. All-or-None Law: "Full send or none" – fires completely or not at all.


Glial Cells (Support Cells)

  1. Astrocyte: "Star helper" – provides nutrients and cleans debris.

  2. Oligodendrocyte: "Many myelin maker" – creates myelin for CNS axons.

  3. Schwann Cell: "Single wrapper" – creates myelin for PNS axons.

  4. Microglia: "Tiny cleaners" – removes waste and fights invaders.


Chemical Processes

  1. Sodium-Potassium Pump: "Ion balancer" – maintains neuron charge.

  2. Ion Channel: "Selective gate" – allows ions to pass through.

  3. Electrostatic Pressure: "Charge attraction" – opposites attract, likes repel.

  4. Diffusion: "Spread out" – molecules move to lower concentration.


Receptors and Ligands

  1. Ligand: "Lock key" – binds to receptors.

  2. Ionotropic Receptor: "Fast gate" – directly opens ion channels.

  3. Metabotropic Receptor: "Signal relay" – triggers a slower chain reaction.

  4. G-Protein: "Message helper" – relays receptor signals.


Synaptic Potentials

  1. Excitatory Postsynaptic Potential (EPSP): "Go signal" – excites neuron to fire.

  2. Inhibitory Postsynaptic Potential (IPSP): "Stop signal" – inhibits neuron from firing.


Integration

  1. Neural Integration: "Sum it up" – combines inputs to decide firing.This process is crucial for determining whether the neuron reaches the threshold potential necessary for action potential generation.