Anatomy
Physiology
Major Diseases
Random Diseases
Miscellaneous
100

How many main cranial nerves are there?

12

100

What part of the brain is responsible for survival?

Brain stem

100

What is dementia?

Syndromes with impairment in multiple aspects (enough that an individual can’t function independently)



100

What is the most common symptom of Tourette Syndrome?

Tics
100

How do depressant drugs affect the brain? What about stimulant drugs?

Depressants - slow brain activity

Stimulants - increases heart rate/BP, affects sleep, interferes with the reward pathway

200
What makes white matter different from grey matter?

White matter has myelinated axons (and is in the inner cerebral cortex)

200

What kinds of muscles do voluntary movement?

Skeletal muscles

200

What is the alternate name for Down Syndrome? Why is it called this?

Trisomy 21

Three copies of chromosome 21

200

What is dyscalculia?

A disorder affecting the ability to understand numbers and math facts


200

What are the two stages of sleep?

SWS (slow wave sleep) and REM (rapid eye movement)

300

What part of a neuron receives a signal, what part interprets the signal, and what part releases neurotransmitters?

Receive - dendrites

Interpret - body/soma

Release neurotransmitters - axon (terminals)

300

What are some functions of the frontal lobe (at least two)?

Voluntary movement, executive functions (achieving a goal), emotional expression, judgement, problem solving

300

What is the cause of Huntington's disease?

Genetically passed down

(if interpreted differently - degeneration of neurons in the substantia nigra)

300

What are parasomnias? Give two examples

Unusual behaviors that occur around sleep time

Ex: sleepwalking, night terrors, sleep related eating disorder, REM sleep behavior disorder, sleep paralysis, nightmare disorder, exploding head syndrome, sleep related hallucinations, bedwetting

300

Out of psychostimulants, designer/club drugs, and opioids, which is the most dangerous and why?

Designer/club drugs - are created in a laboratory, aren't monitored

400

What is the function of astrocytes?

Give nutrients to neurons

400

What are nodes of Ranvier and what is their purpose?

Unmyelinated parts of an axon

Allow for signals to be transmitted more quickly (saltatory conduction - the signal "jumps" from node to node rather than traveling along the entire axon)

400

What is narcolepsy, and what is it caused by?

Overwhelming daytime drowsiness with sudden attacks of sleep

Caused by loss of orexin

400

What is lissencephaly?

Smooth brain

400

Name any neurotransmitter and one of its functions.

GABA - chief inhibitory

Glutamate - chief excitatory

Ach - movement in skeletal muscles

Adrenaline/epinephrine - fight or flight

Norepinephrine - increase heart rate

Dopamine - voluntary movement, pleasure

Serotonin - "happy chemical", mood, memory, cognition

500

What are two of the three parts of the brain stem?

Midbrain, pons, and medulla oblongata

500

What does orexin/hypocretin do?

Stops sudden transitions into sleep

500

What part(s) of the brain are affected by Parkinson's?

Basal ganglia/substantia nigra

500

Name and describe a kind of tremor

Action tremor - voluntary movement of a muscle leads to some form of tremor

Resting tremor - tremor of a muscle when at rest

Essential tremor  - most common type of tremor, in the hands and arms

Holmes Tremor  - irregular one-sided jerks, similar to Parkinson’s, large movement

Dystonic tremor - in people with dystonia 

Cerebellar tremor  - tremor of the arms/legs after a voluntary movement, caused by cerebellum damage from a stroke, tumor, long term alcoholism, or other diseases

Asterixis  - “flapping tremor”, tremor of the hand that looks like a bird flapping its wings

500

What kind of memory is the knowledge/ability to navigate your house?

Declarative/spatial

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