Neurons & neuroglia
AP terminology
Phases of AP
Central Nervous System
Cranial Nerves
100

These gaps between myelin sheaths allow for the rapid jumping of action potentials

What are Nodes of Ranvier?

100

These membrane changes can add together through spatial and temporal summation. When they reach threshold, they trigger an AP

What are graded potentials?

100

This is the voltage that must be reached to open voltage-gated sodium channels and begin an action potential

What is the threshold potential (–55 mV)?

100

This lobe is responsible for high-level cognitive functions like planning and problem-solving, and influences personality and behavior

What is the frontal lobe? 

100

This motor nerve controls the lateral rectus muscle, which abducts the eye.

What is the Abducens nerve (Cranial Nerve VI)?

200

These cells form myelin in the central nervous system and the peripheral nervous system, respectively.

What are oligodendrocytes and Schwann cells?

200

This law states that an action potential either occurs fully or not at all, with no partial responses

What is the all-or-none law?

200

After reaching about +30 mV, these channels close and others open

What are Na+ channels closing and K⁺ channels opening?

200

This brain region is crucial for language comprehension

What is Wernicke’s area?

200

This sensory nerve carries information for both hearing and balance from the inner ear.

What is the Vestibulocochlear nerve (Cranial Nerve VIII)?

300

This glial cell is the resident macrophage behind the blood-brain barrier

What is microglia?

300

These three factors create a neuron’s resting membrane potential

What are the sodium-potassium pump, ion permeability differences, and fixed intracellular anions?

300

Sometimes the intracellular membrane potential temporarily becomes more negative than the resting membrane potential due to continued potassium efflux; this phase is called…

What is hyperpolarization?

300

This brain region coordinates voluntary movements, maintains balance, and regulates posture

What is the cerebellum?

300

This motor nerve moves the superior oblique muscle of the eye, helping you look down and to the side.

What is the Trochlear nerve (Cranial Nerve IV)?

400

The thalamic neuron synapses with a neuron in this brain region, where sensory information is processed and integrated before perception occurs.

What is the cerebral cortex?

400

This type of summation occurs when involves the addition of single stimuli from one neuron over time 

What is temporal summation?

400

During this phase of an action potential, some Na⁺ channels are resting and ready to go. The membrane is hyperpolarized, meaning only a stronger-than-usual stimulus can bring the neuron to threshold and fire again

What is the relative refractory period?

400

This brain region control vital involuntary bodily functions such as heart rhythm, breathing, and blood pressure

What is the medulla oblongata/pons?

400

This mixed nerve provides facial sensation and powers the muscles of mastication

What is the Trigeminal nerve (Cranial Nerve V)?

500

In the CNS, axons run in bundles called (), and cell bodies cluster in structures called (). In the PNS, axons run in bundles called (), and cell bodies cluster in structures called ().

What are nerves and ganglia? What are tracts and nuclei?

500

Normally, presynaptic neurons remove neurotransmitters from the synaptic cleft and recycle them using this process

What is reuptake?

500

A patient is given a lidocaine before a dental procedure. The drug prevents Na⁺ channels from opening. Because of this, the neuron cannot enter this phase of the action potential.

What is depolarization?

500

In the spinal cord, sensory/afferent information enters through () while motor/efferent signals exit through ()

What are dorsal and ventral roots?

500

This mixed nerve helps with taste and muscles of the oral cavitiy, as well as parasympathetic control of salivary glands.

What is the Glossopharyngeal nerve (Cranial Nerve IX)?

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