What is the name for the outer ear.
Auricle/pinna.
What is the function of the Cerebellum?
Largest part of the brain, conscious thoughts & sensations.
What is the disorder characterized by recurrent seizures?
Epilepsy.
What cells maintain the blood/brain barrier?
Astrocytes.
What is an action potential?
A rapid sequence of changes in the voltage across a membrane.
Which number points to the cochlea?
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7.
What is the function of CSF?
Mechanical protection, chemical protection, circulation, watery cushion for the brain & spinal cord.
What disease causes muscle rigidity, tremors, changes in speech and gait.
Parkinson's disease.
What cells perform phagocytosis of pathogens and debris in the brain?
Microglia.
What is it called when the electrical potential difference across the plasma membrane when the cell is in a non-excited state.
Resting potential.
What are the names of the ossicles?
Malleus, incus, and stapes.
What does the Diencephalon include?
Thalamus & Hypothalamus.
What is the autoimmune disease that attacks the myelin sheath?
Multiple sclerosis.
What cells produce myelin sheath in the PNS?
Schwann cells.
What happens during hyperpolarization?
Some potassium channels open and the sodium channels reset.
What are the structures that connect the middle ear to the back of the throat and help equalize pressure called?
The eustachian tubes.
What are the structures responsible for the maintenance and protection of the central Nervous system?
Dura mater, Arachnoid Mater, Pia Mater.
What is cerebral palsy and when does it develop?
A condition characterized by loss of muscle control, caused by damage to motor areas of the brain during fetal development, birth or infancy.
What cells provide nutrient support and protection in the PNS?
What happens during depolarization?
When positively charged sodium ions (Na+) suddenly rush through open voltage-gated sodium channels into a neuron.
What are the small fluid filled sacs in the inner ear that help with spatial orientation and balance called?
The semicircular canals.
Name all the lobes in the brain and their functions.
Frontal Lobe: Voluntary movement, expressive language, emotion, reasoning, etc. Parietal Lobe: pain, temperature, pain, understanding speech, processing sensory information. Temporal Lobe: Processing auditory info & encoding of memory. Occipital Lobe: Visual perception.
What is Guillain-Barre syndrome?
An autoimmune disease that causes demyelination of nerves in PNS.
What cells produce myelin sheath in the CNS?
Oligodendrocytes.
Name the 6 events of an action potential in order.
Resting potential, depolarization, repolarization, hyperpolarization, and refractory period.