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Fundamentals of the nervous system
1. Complete Info. of theComplete Info. of the
Nervous SystemNervous System
By- Dr. Armaan SinghBy- Dr. Armaan Singh
2. Basic division of the Nervous System
(although there is only oneone NS)
ī§ Central nervous system (âCNSâ) â
occupies cranium and vertebral column
ī§ Brain
ī§ Spinal cord
ī§ Peripheral nervous system (âPNSâ)
ī§ Cranial nerves
ī§ Spinal nerves
ī§ Ganglia (clusters of cell bodies)
3. Terminology
ī§ Input: sensory = sensory input
ī§ Receptors monitor changes
ī§ Changes called âstimuliâ (sing., stimulus)
ī§ Information sent by âafferentâ nerves
ī§ Integration
ī§ Info processed
ī§ Decision made about what should be done
ī§ Output: motor = motor output
ī§ Effector organs (muscles or glands) activated
ī§ Effected by âefferentâ nerves
Remember the difference between the English
words âaffectâ and âeffectâ
4. Terminology, continued
ī§ âThe music affected her deeply.â
(Something is experienced: sensory)
ī§ âHis protests had no effect.â
(Something is done or not done: motor)
6. Nervous tissue: 2 types of cells
1. Neurons
ī§ Excitable nerve cells
ī§ Transmit electrical signals
1. Supporting cells: neuroglia or just glia
ī§ Means ânerve glueâ
7. Neurons
ī§ All have a cell body:
with nucleus and
cytoplasm
ī§ Cell bodies are in
clusters
ī§ CNS: clusters called
nuclei
ī§ PNS: clusters are
called ganglia
(are outside the CNS)
8. Neurons, continued
ī§ Can live for a lifetime (i.e. over 100 years)
ī§ Do not divide
ī§ (exception: recent neural stem cells identified)
ī§ Cannot replace themselves
ī§ High metabolic rate
ī§ Require continuous oxygen and glucose
ī§ Die within a few minutes without oxygen
9. Neuron âprocessesâ
(armlike; extend from the cell body)
ī§ Nerve fibers = axons
ī§ Nerve impulse generators &
transmitters
ī§ One per neuron, although can
branch into âcollateralsâ
ī§ At terminal end branch a lot
(e.g. 10,000/terminus)
ī§ Receptive regions called
dendrites
ī§ Have receptors for
neurotransmitters (chemicals
released by other neurons)
ī§ Neurons may have many
10.
11. Neuron processes
ī§ Run through CNS in tracts of white matter
ī§ Run through the PNS forming peripheral
nerves
12. Synapses
ī§ Junctions between neurons
ī§ Information is passed (usually chemically)
ī§ Unidirectional
ī§ Presynaptic (toward synapse) vs postsynaptic (away
from synapse): most neurons function as both
ī§ Synaptic cleft (tiny gap)
15. simplified
ī§ Info passed between neurons by
chemicals
ī§ Can be excitatory or inhibitory
ī§ Along the axons, the information passes
electrically
17. Neurons by function/direction (relative to the CNS)
ī§ Sensory or afferent (toward CNS from sensory receptor in PNS)
ī§ Dendrites with specialized sensory receptors
(in skin, muscles, viscera, etc)
ī§ Cell bodies always in ganglion* outside CNS
ī§ Motor or efferent
ī§ From CNS to muscles, glands or viscera
ī§ Cell bodies almost always in CNS*
ī§ Interneurons*: 99.98% of neurons (within CNS; can be long,
e.g. travel down the spinal cord)
*
*
*
19. Nervous tissue: 2 types of cells
1. (Neurons and their processes: we just
did)
2. Supporting cells = neuroglia (ânerve
glueâ) or just glial cells
ī§ CNS
ī§ Astrocytes
ī§ Oligodendrocytes
ī§ Microglia
ī§ Ependymal cells
ī§ PNS
ī§ Schwann cells
ī§ Satellite cells
From earlierâĻ
20. Supporting cells
ī§ Neuroglia usually refers to CNS ones
ī§ Just âgliaâ to both
ī§ Divide throughout life
ī§ Smaller and darker than neurons
ī§ Outnumber neurons 10 to 1
21. Neuroglia (CNS glial cells)
ī§ Astrocytes
ī§ Star shaped; the most numerous
ī§ Involved in metabolism & synapse formation
ī§ Microglia
ī§ Phagocytes
ī§ Ependymal cells
ī§ Line the cavities of CNS and spinal cord; cilia
ī§ Oligodendrocytes
ī§ Produce myelin sheaths in CNS (see later
slide)
22. PNS supporting cells
ī§ Satellite cells
ī§ Surround neuron cell body
ī§ Schwann cells
ī§ Form myelin (see next slide) in PNS
23. Myelin
ī§ Lipoprotein
ī§ Increases speed of conduction, large
axons
ī§ Are âinsulationâ
ī§ Prevent leakage of electric current
ī§ Layers with spaces (nodes of Ranvier)
between cells
ī§ Impulse âjumpsâ from node to node
ī§ âUnmyelinatedâ axons â smaller, slower
24. Myelin in the Peripheral and Central
Nervous Systems
In multiple sclerosis (MS), patches of myelin
are destroyed in the brain and spinal cord
25. ī§ Schwann cells
ī§ Myelin sheath
ī§ Neurolemma (nucleus
and most of cytoplasm
squeezed to outside)
26. Gray and White Matter of the CNS
(GROSS ANATOMY OF THE CNS)
ī§ Gray matter: gray-colored
ī§ Where neuron cell bodies are clustered
ī§ White matter: white-colored
ī§ Where millions of axons are running between
different part of CNS, in bundles of âtractsâ
ī§ Remember, tracts are in CNS, vs nerves in PNS
ī§ White is from the myelin sheaths
27. Usual pattern of gray/white in CNS
ī§ White exterior to gray
ī§ Gray surrounds hollow
central cavity
ī§ Two regions with
additional gray called
âcortexâ
ī§ Cerebrum: âcerebral cortexâ
ī§ Cerebellum: âcerebellar cortexâ
__________________
______________________________
________________________________
(pic from Marieb lab book p 263)
28. Gray/White in spinal cord
ī§ Hollow central cavity (âcentral
canalâ)
ī§ Gray matter surrounds cavity
ī§ White matter surrounds gray
matter (white: ascending and
descending tracts of axons)
ī§ âHâ shaped on cross section
ī§ Dorsal half of âHâ: cell bodies of
interneurons
ī§ Ventral half of âHâ: cell bodies of
motor neurons
ī§ No cortex
Dorsal (posterior)
Ventral (anterior)
gray
white
Central canal_____
Same pattern
29. From earlier: neuron processes
ī§ Run through CNS in tracts of white matter
ī§ Run through the PNS forming peripheral
nerves
30. Nerves are bundles of nerve fibers
(long axons) in connective tissue
ī§ To or from CNS to periphery
ī§ Classified according to direction, like
neurons
ī§ Mixed: carry both sensory (afferent) and
motor (efferent) fibers
ī§ All spinal nerves are mixed
ī§ Sensory or afferent nerves: to CNS
ī§ Motor or efferent nerves: ventral roots of
spinal cord
31. Interneurons
(99% of all neurons)
ī§ In gray matter:
ī§ They process received sensory information
ī§ They direct this info to specific regions of the CNS
ī§ They initiate the appropriate motor response
ī§ Via axons in white matter
ī§ They transmit info (sensory and motor) from one
region of the CNS to another
The structural link between the PNS and CNS occurs in the gray matter of the CNS
The simplest example of neuronal integration is the reflex arc (see next slide)
32. Reflex arcs: our âreflexesâ
ī§ Fast, automatic,
involuntary
ī§ Somatic or visceral
ī§ Motor responses
to stimuli
ī§ Monosynaptic or
polysynaptic
ī§ 5 components:
see right
Example of simplest, monosynapatic reflex
34. Basic neuronal
organization
ī§ Coronal section
of cerebrum
ī§ Cross sections
of spinal cord
and brains stem
ī§ Note gray
matter (brown)
and white
matter (tan)
ī§ Reflex arc and
information
processing are
shownAnterior view
35. Terminology for quiz
ī§ Neuron = nerve cell
ī§ Neuroglia = supporting cell
ī§ Nerve fiber = long axon
ī§ Nerve = collection of nerve fibers (axons) in PNS
ī§ Tract = collections of nerve fibers (axons) in CNS
ī§ Nucleus = cluster of cell bodies in CNS
ī§ Ganglia = cluster of cell bodies in PNS
New:
ī§ Unilateral: on one side
ī§ Ipsilateral: on the same side
ī§ Contralateral: on the opposite side
Remember also:
ī§ CNS vs PNS
ī§ Input: sensory: afferent: to brain
ī§ Output: motor : efferent: from brain
36. Pyramidal cells of cerebral cortex
ī§ This is where the âpyramidalâ tract gets its name
(the main motor tract from the cerebral cortex);
also pyramids of medulla, pyramidal decussation