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Human Anatomy & Physiology, Sixth Edition Elaine N. Marieb 11 Fundamentals of the Nervous System and Neural Tissue Part A
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Nervous System Figure 11.1
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Divisions of the Nervous System
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CNS PNS Efferent (motor) neurons Afferent (sensory) neurons ANSSomatic Sympathetic Parasympathetic
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Provide scaffolding for neurons Segregate & insulate neurons Guide growing neurons to proper connections Promote health & growth of neurons Cell types Astrocytes Microglial cells Ependymal cells Oligodentrocytes Schwann cells Satellite cells Neuroglia – Supporting Cells
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Abundant, versatile, and highly branched CNS cell Cover capillaries Support & brace neurons Anchor neurons to their nutrient supplies Guide migration of young neurons Control the chemical environment Astrocytes
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Microglia – small, ovoid cells with spiny processes Phagocytic Monitor health of neurons Microglial Cells
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Ependymal Cells Squamous or columnar cells lining ventricles of brain and spinal cord
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Branched cells that wrap CNS nerve fibers (axons) Oligodendrocytes
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Schwann Cells and Satellite Cells Schwann cells surround axons of PNS neurons Satellite cells surround bipolar neuron cell bodies in ganglia
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Whitish, fatty (protein-lipid), segmented sheath around most long axons sphingomyelin Formed by: Schwann cells in the PNS Oligodendrocytes in CNS Functions to: Protect axons Electrically insulate fibers Increases speed of impulse transmission Myelin Sheath and Neurilemma Formation
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A Schwann cell: Encloses the axon with its plasma membrane Concentric layers of membrane make up the myelin sheath Neurilemma Nucleus and cytoplasm of a Schwann cell
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Functional units of neurons Composed of a body, axon, and dendrites Long-lived, amitotic, and have a high metabolic rate Plasma membrane functions in: Electrical signaling Cell-to-cell signaling during development Neurons (Nerve Cells)
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Generate and transmit action potentials Secrete neurotransmitters from termini Intracellular movement along axons Anterograde — toward terminus Retrograde — away from terminus, toward soma Axon Function
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Both myelinated and unmyelinated fibers are present Myelin sheaths are formed by oligodendrocytes Nodes of Ranvier are widely spaced There is no neurilemma Axons of the CNS
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White matter – dense collections of myelinated fibers Gray matter – mostly soma and unmyelinated fibers Regions of the Brain and Spinal Cord
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Structural: Multipolar - three or more processes Bipolar - two processes (axon and dendrite) Unipolar - single process diverges into 2 conductive regions Functional: Sensory (afferent) — transmit impulses toward the CNS Motor (efferent) — carry impulses away from the CNS Interneurons (association neurons) — shuttle signals through CNS pathways Neuron Classification
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Structural Classes of Neurons
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