Nervous System Overview & Functions
Nervous System Overview & Functions
Oligodendrocytes – Wrap and insulate, form 1. Nerve outside the brain and spinal cord
myelin sheath, wrap around neurons producing
an insulating barrier called the myelin sheath
Functional Classification of the Peripheral
Nervous System
Peripheral Nervous System
Sensory (afferent) division
Satellite Cells – Surround neuron cell bodies, do
mainly in the peripheral system what astrocytes 1. Nerve fibers that carry information to
doing in the central system they surround and the central nervous system
support cell bodies Motor (efferent) division
Schwann Cells – Insulate, help form myelin 1. Nerve fibers that carry impulses away
sheath, similar to oligodendrocytes they wrap from the central nervous system
around axons and make that insulating myeline 2. Two subdivisions: Somatic nervous
sheath system = voluntary and Autonomic
Axon – is like a talker, a nerve fiber, portion of a nervous system = involuntary
neuron that carries nerve impulses away from Nervous Tissue: Support Cells (Neuroglia or
the cell body Glia)
Dendrites – the listeners they pick up Astrocytes
messages, news, gossip from other cells and
convey that information to the cell body 1. Abundant, star – shaped cells
2. Brace neurons
3. Form barrier between capillaries and
neurons
4. Control of the chemical environment of Large nucleolus
the brain (CNS)
4. Extensions outside the cell body
Nerve Tissue: Support Cells Dendrites – conduct impulses
Microglia (CNS) toward the cell body
Axons – conduct impulses away
1. Spider – like phagocytes from the cell body (only 1!)
2. Dispose of debris
Axon and Nerve Impulses
Ependymal Cells (CNS)
Axons end in axonal terminals
1. Line cavities of the brain and spinal cord
2. Circulate cerebrospinal fluid Axonal terminals contain vesicles with
neurotransmitters
Oligodendrocytes (CNS)
Axonal terminals are separated from the next
1. Produce myelin sheath around nerve neuron by a gap
fibers in the central nervous system
1. Synaptic cleft – gap between adjacent
Neuroglia and Neurons neurons
1. Neuroglia divide 2. Synapse – junction between nerve
2. Neurons do not Nerve Fiber Coverings
3. Most brain tumors are gliomas
4. Most brain tumors involve the neuroglia Schwann Cells – produce myelin sheaths in jelly
cells, not the neurons – roll like fashion
Support Cells of the PNS Nodes of Ranvier – gaps in myelin sheath along
the axon
Satellite Cells
Sclerosis – myelin sheath hardens to a tissue,
1. Protect neuron cell bodies this is considered an autoimmune disease
Schwann Cells Neuron Cell Body Location
1. Form myelin sheath in the peripheral Most are found in the central nervous system
nervous system
1. Gray matter – cell bodies and
Nervous Tissues: Neurons unmyelinated fibers
Neurons = nerve cells 2. Nuclei – clusters of cell bodies within
the white matter of the central nervous
1. Cells specialized to transmit message system
2. Major regions of neurons
Cell body – nucleus and Ganglia – collections of cell bodies outside the
metabolic center of the cell central nervous system
Processes – fibers that extend
from the cell body (dendrites
and axons)
3. Cell body
Nucleus
The exchange of ions initiates an action
potential in the neuron
Functional Classification of Neurons
The Reflex Arc
Sensory (afferent) neurons
Reflex – rapid, predictable and involuntary
Carry impulses from the sensory
responses to stimuli
receptors
o Cutaneous sense organs Reflex arc – direct route from a sensory neuron,
o Proprioceptors – detect stretch to an interneuron, to an effector
or tension
Types of Reflexes and Regulation
Motor (efferent) neurons
Autonomic reflexes
Carry impulses from the central nervous
Smooth muscle regulation
system
Heart and blood pressure regulation
Interneurons (association neurons)
Regulation of glands
Found in neural pathways in the central
Digestive system regulation
nervous system
Connect sensory and motor neurons Somatic reflexes
Bipolar neurons – one axon and one dendrite An interruption in blood flow for 1 to 2 minutes
impairs neuronal function
Unipolar neurons – have a short single process
leaving the cell body Total deprivation of oxygen for about 4 minutes
causes permanent injury
How Neurons Function (Physiology)
Regions of the Brain
Irritability – ability to respond to stimuli
Cerebral Hemispheres – Left and Right
Conductivity – ability to transmit an impulse Hemispheres
The plasma membrane at rest is polarized Diencephalon
Longitudinal Fissure – separates the cerebrum Occipital Lobes – responsible for vision,
into right and left halves (cerebral hemispheres) combine visual images with other sensory
experiences
Lissencephaly
Specialized Areas of the Cerebrum
Smooth brain
Somatic Sensory Area – receives impulses from
Sulci and gyri are absent the body’s sensory receptors
Associated with intellectual disability, Primary Motor Area – sends impulses to
developmental delay, and seizures skeletal muscles
Lobes of the Cerebrum Broca’s Area – involved in our ability to speak
Fissures (deep grooves) divide the cerebrum Sensory Areas
into lobes
Several lobes of the cerebrum interpret
Surface lobes of the cerebrum impulses that arrive from sensory receptors,
Frontal Lobe producing feelings or sensations
Parietal Lobe Sensory areas for taste are located near
Occipital Lobe the bases of the central sulci along the
Temporal Lobe lateral sulci
Insula – serves as a crossroads for translating The sense of smell arises from centers
sensory information into appropriate emotional deep within the cerebrum
responses, responsible for some of the The sensory speech area or Wernicke’s
qualities that makes us human area is in the temporal lobe, adjacent to
the parietal lobe near the posterior end
of the lateral sulcus, usually in the left
hemisphere
Association Areas Wernicke’s (Posterior Language) Area (Area 22,
and Possibly Areas 39 and 40)
Analyze and interpret sensory experience
It is active as you translate words into thoughts
Oversee memory, reasoning, verbalizing,
judgment, and emotion Unlike those who have CVAs in Broca’s area,
people who suffer strokes in Wernicke’s are can
1. Frontal Lobes control higher intellectual still speak, but cannot arrange words in a
process coherent fashion (fluent aphasia, or “word
2. Parietal Lobes help in understanding salad”)
speech and choosing words to express
thoughts and feelings Common Integrative Area (Areas 5, 7, 39, and
3. Wernicke’s area “general interpretative 40)
area,” near where the occipital,
This area integrates sensory interpretations
parietal, and temporal lobes meet –
from the association areas and impulses from
integrating visual, auditory and other
other areas, allowing the formation of thoughts
sensory information, and then
based on a variety of sensory inputs
interpretating a situation
4. Temporal lobes and the regions of the Prefrontal Cortex (Frontal Association Area)
posterior ends of the lateral sulcus (Areas 9, 10, 11, and 12)
store memory of visual scenes, music,
Concerned with the makeup of a person’s
and other complex sensory patterns
personality, intellect, complex learning abilities,
5. Occipital lobes that are adjacent to the
recall of information, initiative, judgment,
visual centers are important in
foresight, reasoning, conscience, intuition
analyzing visual patterns and combining
mood, planning for the future, and
visual images with other sensory
development of abstract ideas
experiences, as when one recognizes
another person or an object. Premotor Area (Area 6)
Somatosensory Association Area (Areas 5 and 7) This area deals with learned motor activities of
This area permits you to determine the exact a complex and sequential nature
shape and texture of an object by feeling it, to It generates nerve impulses that cause specific
determine the orientation of one object with groups of muscles to contract in a specific
respect to another as they are felt, and to sense sequence, as when you write your name. This
the relationship of one body part to another area also serves as a memory bank for such
Auditory Association Area (Area 22) movements
Allows you to recognize a particular sound as Frontal Eye Field Area (Area 8)
speech, music, or noise It controls voluntary scanning movements of
Orbitofrontal Cortex (Area 11) the eyes – like those you just used in reading
this sentence
This area allows you to identify odors and to
discriminate among different odors
Primary Motor Area (Area 4) Functional Differences Between the Two
Each region in the primary motor area controls
Cerebral Hemispheres
voluntary contractions of specific muscles or Left Hemisphere Functions
groups of muscles
Receives somatic sensory signals from
Broca’s Speech Area (Areas 44 and 45) and controls muscles on right side of
body
The coordinated contractions of your speech
Reasoning
and breathing muscles enable you to speak your
Numerical and scientific skills
thoughts
Ability to use and understand sign
Injury to language areas of the cerebral cortex language
results in aphasia an inability to use or Spoken and written language
comprehend words
Right Hemisphere Functions
Dominant
Receives somatic sensory signals from
In most people the left hemisphere is dominant and controls muscles on left side of
for; body
Musical and artistic awareness
Language – related activities of speech,
Space and pattern perception
writing
Recognition of faces and emotional
Reading
content of facial expressions
Complex intellectual functions requiring
Generation emotional content of
verbal, analytical, and computational
language
skills
Generation mental images to compare
In other people, the right hemisphere is spatial relationships
dominant for; Identifying and discriminating among
odors
Language – related abilities, or the
hemispheres are equally dominant Specialized Area of the Cerebrum
Broca’s area in the dominant hemisphere Cerebral areas involved in special senses
controls the muscles that function in speaking
Gustatory area (Taste)
Non – Dominant Visual area
Auditory area
Carrying on basic functions
Olfactory area
Specializes in nonverbal functions, such as
Interpretation areas of the cerebrum
motor tasks that require orientation of the body
in space, understanding and interpreting Speech/language region
musical patterns, and nonverbal visual Language comprehension region
experiences General interpretation area
Controls emotional and intuitive thinking
Layers of the Cerebrum Brain Stem
Scalp and skin Clear, colorless liquid that protects the brain
and spinal cord from chemical and physical
Skull and vertebral column injuries
Meninges
Carries oxygen, glucose, and other needed Contusion
chemicals from the blood to neurons and
1. Nervous tissue destruction occurs
neuroglia
2. Nervous tissue does not regenerate
The CSF Contributes to Homeostasis in Three
Cerebral edema
Main Ways
1. Swelling from the inflammatory
1. Mechanical protection – shock –
response
absorbing medium that protects the
2. May compress and kill brain tissue
delicate tissues of the brain and spinal
cord from jolts that would otherwise Cerebrovascular Accident (CVA)
cause them to hit the bony walls of the
cranial cavity and vertebral canal. Buoys 1. Commonly called a stroke
the brain so that it floats in the cranial 2. The result of a ruptured blood vessel
cavity supplying a region of the brain
2. Chemical protection – optimal chemical 3. Brain tissue supplied with oxygen from
environment for accurate neuronal that blood source dies
signaling 4. Loss of some functions or death may
3. Circulation – exchange of nutrients and result
waste products between the blood and Neurotransmitters
nervous tissue
Acetylcholine
Choroid plexuses – sites of CSF production
1. Excitatory neurotransmitter at some
Hydrocephalus – when excess CSF accumulates synapses
in the ventricles, the CSF pressure rises, if the 2. Also, an inhibitory neurotransmitter at
condition persists, the fluid buildup compresses other synapses, where it binds to
and damages the delicate nervous tissue. It is metabotropic receptors coupled to G
relieved by draining the excess CSF proteins that open K channels
Blood Brain Barrier Amino Acids
1. Includes the least permeable capillaries 1. Glutamate (Glutamic acid) – excitatory
of the body neurons in the CNS and half of the
2. Excludes many potentially harmful synapses in the brain communicate via
substances glutamate
3. Useless against some substance 2. Aspartate (Aspartic acid) – glutamate
Fats and fat-soluble molecules transporters actively transport
Respiratory gases glutamate back into the synaptic end
Alcohol bulbs and neighboring neuroglia
Nicotine
Anesthesia Gamma Aminobutyric Acid (GABA) and Glycine