Definitions
Anatomy
Physiology
Need to Know's
Processes
125

What is a neuronal pool?

Thousands to millions of interneurons that share a specific body function.

- i.e. control rhythm of breathing

125

What are discharge and facilitated zones? (3 bullets)

Different pathways that are taken between presynaptic & postsynaptic neurons depending on what the need is.

Discharge zone: only a single cell can produce firing 

Facilitated zone: a single cell can only make it easier for the postsynaptic cell to fire, needs all the neurons

125

What is the difference between diverging and converging circuits?

A diverging circuit is one cell that synapses on another that each synapses on others,

whereas a converging circuit is input from many fibers on one neuron (that is the respiratory center).

125

How do our brains process information from chemical & electrical signals?

WE DON’T KNOW AND CANNOT TELL

We can only sum up how information gets to the brain, and the qualitative information depends on the strength of the stimuli and the recruitment of neurons.

125

What does presynaptic inhibition look like?

One presynaptic neuron suppresses another one. Neuron 1 releases inhibitory neurotransmitter GABA, which prevents voltage-gated calcium channels from opening.

150

Cholinergic

a compound or synapse that employs acetylcholine as its neurotransmitter

- part of the receptor system

150

What is the most superior part of the brain stem?

The midbrain, containing the substantia nigra.

The substantia nigra releases the dopamine neurotransmitter to the deepest part of the cerebrum, called the basal ganglia

150

What are reverberating and parallel after-discharge circuits?

- Neurons stimulate each other in a linear sequence but one cell restimulates the first cell to start the process all over 

- input neuron stimulates several pathways which stimulate the output neuron to go on firing for longer time after input has truly stopped

150

What are the symptoms of Alzheimer's Disease?

Memory loss for recent events, moody, combative, lose ability to walk, and eat

150

Can a diagnosis of Alzheimer’s be given before death?

No. There can be testing done, but the actual diagnosis is confirmed at time of autopsy, when professionals can observe atrophy of the gyri (folds in the brain).

175

Afferent

sensory information that carries signal towards the central nervous system

175

What are the three (less irrelevant) types of neurotransmitters?

- amino acid neurotransmitters

- monoamines

- neuropeptides

175

How does Parkinson’s affect the body?

It can cause progressive loss of motor function beginning in 50s or 60s with no recovery. Despite that, there are many treatment options.

175

How many people are affected by Alzheimer’s Disease?

100,000 deaths/year

11% of the population over 65; 47% by age 85

175

What does the excitatory cholinergic synapse process look like?

Nerve signal opens voltage-gated calcium channels

- triggers release of ACh which crosses synapse 

- ACh receptors trigger opening of Na+ channels  producing local potential (postsynaptic potential)

- When reaches -55mV, triggers AP

200

Efferent

motor information carries signal away from the central nervous system

200

How many cells and synapses are present in the cerebral cortex?

40,000 synapses, estimated to contain 100 trillion synapses
200

What causes Parkinson’s to attack the body?

the degeneration of dopamine-releasing neurons in the substantia nigra causes involuntary muscle contraction, facial rigidity, slurred speech, and illegible handwriting, slow gait.
200

What is neural integration? Stick to the basics.

Based on types of postsynaptic potentials produced by neurotransmitters

- add up the EPSPs and the IPSPs

200

What does the Inhibitory GABA-ergic synapse process look like?

Nerve signal triggers release of GABA, which crosses synapse

- GABA receptors trigger opening of Cl- (chloride) channels producing hyperpolarization

-Postsynaptic neuron now less likely to reach threshold (inhibitory)

225

What is saltatory conduction in myelinated fibers?

Voltage-gated channels needed for APs, consisting of very fast sodium diffusion.

225

What is the physical basis of memory?

A pathway of cells, called a memory trace or engram
225

What is synaptic potentiation? 

The process of making transmission easier, correlating with different forms of memory: immediate, short-term memory, and long-term.
225
What increases the area of synaptic contact in long-term memory?
Physical remodeling of synapses with new branching of axons or dendrites.
225
What does the Excitatory Adrenergic synapse process look like?

Neurotransmitter is NE (excitatory)

- Acts through 2nd messenger system (cAMP)

- cAMP has multiple effects: synthesis of new enzymes, activating enzymes, opening ligand gates, and producing a postsynaptic potential


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