Title: THE NERVOUS SYSTEM
1THE NERVOUS SYSTEM
2 Divisions of the NS
- Central Nervous System (CNS)
- Peripheral Nervous System (PNS)
Fig. 11.32
3Sensory vs. Motor Nerves
- SENSORY nerves
- Body ? CNS
- MOTOR nerves
- CNS ? Body
Fig. 10.2
42 Different Types of Motor Nerves
- Somatic NS
- consciously controlled effectors
- Autonomic NS
- involuntary effectors
5Cells of the Nervous System
6NEUROGLIAL CELLS
- Fill spaces
- Provide structure
- Produce myelin
- Phagocytize bacteria cellular debris
- Outnumber neurons
- Can divide (mitosis)
7 Neuron Anatomy Overview
- Dendrites ? Cell body ? Axon ? Synaptic knobs at
axon terminals ? Effector
8Neuron Anatomy
- Schwann cells
- type of neuroglial cell
- myelin sheath
- Nodes of Ranvier
Fig. 10.3
9Classification of Neurons
Fig. 10.6
10Sensory, Motor, and Interneurons (Direction)
- Sensory neurons
- PNS ? CNS
- Motor neurons
- CNS ? PNS
- Interneurons
- in between sensory
- and motor neurons
Fig. 10.7
11Shapes of Neurons
Fig. 10.6
12Neuron vs. a Nerve
- Neuron a cell
- Nerve bundles of neuron axons, and neuroglial
cells bound together - outside brain/spinal cord
Fig. 11.24
13Neuron Physiology
- Sending neuron impulses action potential
- change in electrical charge in cell membrane
- depends on electrolytes
- potassium (K) and sodium (Na)
14First Things First Creating a Resting Potential
- Protein pumps
- open and close
- let ions through
- Active pumps
- against a gradient
- Passive pumps
- with the gradient
Fig. 10.13
Na/K Pump
15Resting Potential
Fig. 10.14
16Action Potential
Fig. 10.15
Action Potential
17A Nerve Impulse- a series of action potentials
Fig. 10.16
Computer activity http//outreach.mcb.harvard.edu/
animations/actionpotential.swf
18Action Potential
Fig. 10.18
Action Potential Zoomed Out
19What happens when the nerve impulse reaches the
end of the axon?
- axon terminals
- next to another neuron (as shown) or a muscle or
gland - Gap called a synapse
- Synapse
Fig. 10.11
20The Synapse
- Neurotransmitters
- Synaptic cleft
- Receptors
- Send a message
Fig. 10.12
21Neurotransmitters
22Classification of Neurotransmitters
- EXCITATORY depolarize the next neuron
- It tells the next neuron/muscle/gland to GO
- INHIBITORY hyperpolarize the next neuron
- prevent the nerve impulse from continuing
- It tells the next neuron/muscle/gland to STOP
23Acetylcholine (ACH)
- First neurotransmitter discovered (1921)
- Mostly excitatory
- Skeletal muscle neuromuscular junctions
synapses between the brain and spinal cord - Message
- muscles contract or
- continue sending impulses
24Acetylcholine cont.
- Nicotine
- Activates acetylcholine receptors
- Releases dopamine (coming later)
- Alzheimers
- Memory loss, depression, disorientation,
dementia, hallucinations,death - Deficient acetylcholine
25Glutamate
- Generally excitatory
- helps send messages in the brain
- Involved in learning and memory
- Alcohol inhibits glutamate receptor function
- Monosodium Glutamate (MSG)
- food additive
- stimulates glutamate receptors in the taste buds
26Serotonin
- Antidepressants (Prozac, Zoloft, Paxil, etc)
- SSRIs or Selective Serotonin Reuptake
Inhibitors - Serotonin accumulates in the synapse
- feel more content
- LSD blocks serotonin
- MDMA releases excess serotonin
- Found in the brain
- Primarily inhibitory
- Sleep, mood and temperature regulation
- Insomnia deficient serotonin
27Dopamine
- AKA the brain reward
- Regulates emotions, moods and subconscious
control of skeletal muscle - Nicotine
- excess dopamine release
- Cocaine
- blocks reuptake (leaves more in the synapse)
- Methamphetamine
- excess dopamine release
28Dopamine - contd
- Dopamine also sends signals that help coordinate
your skeletal muscle movements - Parkinsons Disease
- deficient dopamine production
- tremors
29GABA
- Found in the brain
- Generally inhibitory
- Prevents the receptor nerve from being
overstimulated - When it accumulates it has a sedative effect
- Valium, Xanax and Ativan work by allowing GABA to
accumulate - Huntingtons Disease deficient GABA
30Norepinephrine
- Found in the brain
- Alertness, regulation of moods
- Ritalin Adderall- increase level of norepi and
dopamine - Strattera- increase only norepi
- Clinical depression low norepi
31Endorphins
- Flood the synaptic cleft during pain or stress
- Usually inhibit neurons from firing, causing an
analgesic effect - At lower levels can excite the next neuron
- Reduces pain and makes one feel good
- Opiates (heroin, codeine, morphine, oxycodone,
hydrocodone, etc) - bind to endorphin receptors and mimic endorphins
32Anandamide
- Involved in working memory, regulation of feeding
behavior, generation of motivation and pleasure - Anandamide receptors are called cannabinoid
receptors - A lot of cannabinoid receptors in the hippocampus
(short term memory), cerebellum (coordination)
and basal ganglia (unconcious muscle movement) of
brain - THC (found in marijuana) mimics anandamides and
binds to cannabinoid receptors
33Peripheral Nervous System
34PNS Flow Chart
- Peripheral Nervous System
- Motor Sensory
- nerves nerves
- Somatic Autonomic
- nerves nerves
- Sympathetic Parasympathetic
- nerves
nerves
35PNS cont.
- Motor nerves are divided into
- Somatic n.s.- conscious activities
- Autonomic n.s. unconscious activities
- Autonomic n.s is divided into
- sympathetic and
- parasympathetic divisions.
36PNS cont.
- SYMPATHETIC
- fight or flight responses
- speeds up heart rate, breathing and other
functions vital to survival - Digestion and other less essential functions will
be slowed for awhile.
- PARASYMPATHETIC
- when the body is not mobilized and active in
fight or flight. - speeds up digestion and other essential functions
- When the body is in this mode, heart rate and
breathing are calm.
37The Central Nervous System
38Central Nervous System - Spinal Cord
Figs11.5, 11.6, 11.7
39Reflexes
Fig. 11.8
40Central Nervous System The Brain
- Cerebrum
- Largest part
- Sensory motor functions
- Higher mental functions (memory, reasoning, etc)
- Brainstem
- Connects the cerebrum to the spinal cord
- Cerebellum
- Coordinates voluntary muscle movements
- Diencephalon
- Processes sensory info
Fig. 11.15
41The Cerebrum
- Divided into right and left cerebral hemispheres
- Covered by folds called convolutions/gyri and
grooves called sulci (little groves) and fissures
(big grooves) - Connected by the corpus callosum
- It has a cortex an outer covering about 2 mm
thick - Gray matter vs. white matter
42The Cerebrum cont.
- The cerebral cortex is divided into LOBES which
control various functions - FPOT
Fig. 11.16 11.17
43The Cerebrum cont.
- FRONTAL LOBE
- Primary Motor Area
- controls voluntary muscles
- Brocas Area
- motor speech
- usually L hemisphere
- Voluntary eye movement
- Concentration, planning, problem solving, analysis
44The Cerebrum cont.
- PARIETAL LOBE
- Sensory info touch, taste, pressure, pain
- interpretation of sensory info, awareness of
body - Wernickes Area
- sensory speech, understanding written spoken
language - usually L hemisphere
45The Cerebrum cont.
- OCCIPITAL LOBE
- visual senses
- analyzing visual patterns, combining visual
images with other info (i.e. recognizing a
person) - TEMPORAL LOBE
- sensory smell and hearing
- interpretation of sensory experiences
(understanding speech, reading)
46Cerebral Hemispheres
- Hemisphere half of sphere (brain)
- The right side of the brain controls the left
side of the body and vice versa - Corpus callosum
47The Cerebellum
- Integrates sensory info
- Balance, coordination of skeletal muscle, posture
48Brainstem
- Brainstem Connects the cerebrum to the spinal
cord - Midbrain visual and auditory reflex center
- Pons transfer nerve impulses
- Medulla Oblongata
- Cardiac center- heart rate
- Vasomotor center- smooth muscle in blood
vessels/blood pressure - Respiratory center- breathing rate
- Coughing, sneezing, swallowing and vomiting
reflexes
Fig. 11.21
49Diencephalon
- Thalamus-
- - Receives all sensory impulses (except smell)
and relays them to the appropriate region of the
cerebral cortex - 2. Hypothalamus
- Maintain homeostasis
- Links the nervous system to the endocrine system
- 3. Pituitary pineal glands
Fig. 11.19
50Diencephalon cont.
- The limbic system is a collection of structures
involved in emotional behavior and your feelings - Includes the amygdala and hippocampus
51MEMORY
- Primarily occurs in the cerebrum and the
hippocampus (in the diencephalon) - 3 main types of memory
- Sensory memory lasts momentarily and involves
input from senses - Short term memory lasts from a few seconds or
minutes to hours (varies)
52Memory cont.
- 3. Long term memory the neurons actually change
shape (dendrites extend, more are made, etc) and
connect with other neurons. Lasts days to years
(varies).