SYMPATHETIC NERVOUS SYSTEM
PARASYMPATHETIC NERVOUS SYSTEM
RECEPTOR RAPID FIRE
SPINAL & EPIDURAL ANATOMY
CEREBRAL BLOOD FLOW & BRAIN
IMAGE IDENTIFICATION
Others
DEFINITIONS
100

These fibers are efferent myelinated preganglionic sympathetic fibers.


What are B fibers?

100

This cranial nerve carries approximately 75% of parasympathetic output.

What is the vagus nerve (CN X)?

100

Beta-1 stimulation causes this cardiac effect.

What is increased contractility (inotropy)?

100

This ligament produces the characteristic "pop" during epidural placement.

What is ligamentum flavum?

100

This EEG wave waveform predominates in REM sleep, awake state, and light anesthesia and is characterized by high frequency and low amplitude 

What is beta?

100

Identify the structure D and what section of the ear? 


Incus: middle ear

100

This cell type has the most negative resting membrane potential.

What is skeletal muscle? 


A neuron is approximately -60 to -70 mV, smooth muscle is approximately -50 to -60 mV, and this tissue is approximately -85 to -95 mV.

100

This occurs when a synapse becomes better at transmitting signals after repeated use, making activation of the same pathway easier over time.

What is facilitation?

200

This structure serves as the entry point for preganglionic sympathetic fibers into the sympathetic chain.

What is the white ramus?

200

The neurotransmitter released by parasympathetic postganglionic neurons.

What is acetylcholine?

200

Beta-2 stimulation in the lungs causes:

What is bronchodilation?


200

Loss of resistance indicates entry into this space.

What is the epidural space?

200

Increasing this arterial gas causes cerebral vasodilation.


What is CO2?

200

Identify the structure responsible for equilibrium.

What is the vestibular apparatus?

200

These two nitrogenous bases are classified as purines.

These two nitrogenous bases are classified as pyrimidines in DNA.


What are adenine and guanine?

What are thymine and cytosine?

200

This type of summation increases signal strength by recruiting additional nerve fibers and is generally slower than increasing firing frequency.


What is spatial summation?

300

These receptors cause smooth muscle contraction and vasoconstriction when stimulated.

What are alpha-1 receptors?

300

These receptors are found at parasympathetic target organs and use G proteins.

What are muscarinic receptors?

300

This receptor is located at autonomic ganglia.

What is N1?

300

The spinal cord normally ends around this vertebral level.

What is L2?


300

The cerebral autoregulation curve shifts this direction in chronic hypertension.

What is right?

300

This ion is primarily responsible for depolarization of cochlear hair cells.

What is potassium?

300

A patient receives a local anesthetic. The primary site where local anesthetics exert their action is this structure.

What is the Node of Ranvier?

 

300

This phenomenon occurs when one neuron fires repeatedly in rapid succession, increasing the strength of the signal over time.

What is temporal summation?

400

This receptor decreases sympathetic outflow when activated. Dex and clonidine are agonists of this receptor.

What is alpha-2?

400

This medication blocks muscarinic receptors and increases heart rate.

What is atropine?

400

This receptor is located at the neuromuscular junction.

What is N2?

400

The bundle of freely floating nerve roots below the conus medullaris.


What is the cauda equina?

400

This EEG wave predominates in deep anesthesia and characterized by very low frequency, low-high amplitude 

What is delta?

400

Identify this structure in the ear


external auditory meatus

400

About ____ % of smooth muscle contraction is controlled locally by chemicals and hormones that act directly on the muscle, without needing a nerve signal or action potential.

What is 50%?

400

This occurs when multiple neurons synapse onto a single postsynaptic neuron, allowing information from several pathways to be integrated.


What is convergence?

500

A patient develops severe hypertension and reflex bradycardia after bladder distention below a spinal cord lesion. This syndrome is called what?

What is autonomic hyperreflexia?

500

Name four physiologic effects of parasympathetic stimulation.

What are decreased HR, increased secretions, increased GI motility, and miosis?

500

Tyrosine → L-DOPA → Dopamine → ______ → Epinephrine

What is norepinephrine?

500

Place these structures in order:
Dura, Flavum, Arachnoid, Epidural Space

What is Flavum → Epidural Space → Dura → Arachnoid?

500

A patient with elevated ICP develops hypercarbia. What happens?

What is increased cerebral blood flow and increased ICP?

500

These vessels provide the major anterior circulation.

What are the internal carotid arteries?

500

A mutation is most likely to cause this cellular consequence.




What is abnormal protein formation?

500

This process occurs when a sensory receptor becomes less responsive to a constant stimulus over time.


What is sensory receptor adaptation?

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