Nerve Cells
Nervous System
Action Potential
Vocabulary
Neuroglial Cells
100

These are nerve cells that transmit information.

What are neurons?

100

These are the three parts of the nervous system.

What are the brain, spinal cord, and nerves?

100

These are the channels that sodium (Na+) ions and potassium (K+) ions travel through.

What are voltage gated channels?

100

These are white masses on the brain that are evidence of nerve cell damage in your brain or spinal cord.

What are lesions?

100

These are cells connected to nerve cells that act as support for the neurons.

What are neuroglial cells?

200

This is the part of a nerve cell that contains the nucleus and other organelles.

What is a cell body?

200

These are the two divisions of the nervous system.

What are the central nervous system and the peripheral nervous system?

200

This determines the speed at which an impulse travels along an axon. If it has this characteristic, then the impulse travels faster.

What is a myelinated of axon or unmyelinated?

200

This is a junction or area between two communicating neurons.

What is a synapse?

200

These are neuroglial cells that are responsible for immune function, digesting debris, and killing bacteria. 

What are microglial cells?

300

These are the shorter, more numerous parts of the nerve cell that receive information.

What are dendrites?

300

This is the voluntary portion of the nervous system, while this other part is the involuntary portion.

What are the somatic and autonomic nervous systems?

300

This is the stage potential of a nerve cell membrane at -70mv. The outside of the cell is positive and the inside of the cell is negative.

What is resting potential?

300
This is a chemical substance that is released at the synaptic gap to signal the next neuron.


What is a neurotransmitter?

300

These neuroglial cells are responsible for making myelin sheath that provides insulation around the axons,

What are oligodendrocytes?

400

This is a single, long fiber that conducts information along the nerve cell.

What is an axon?

400

This is the branch of the autonomic nervous system that is responsible for the "fight or flight" response.

What is the sympathetic branch?

400

This is the stage of the action potential when the sodium (Na+) ions move back to the outside of the cell and the potassium (K+) ions move back to the inside of the cell, causing the charges to go back to normal.

What is repolarization?

400

This is when a needle is placed between the lumbar, and spinal fluid is drawn to check for inflammation and bacterial infection.

What is a lumbar puncture?

400

These neuroglial cells connect blood vessels to neurons.

What are astrocytes?

500

This is the insulation around the axon of the nerve cell and these are the spaces in between each insulation.

What is the myelin sheath and the nodes of ranvier?

500

This is the branch of the autonomic nervous system that is responsible for the "rest and digest" function.

What is the parasympathetic branch?

500

During this stage of an action potential, sodium ions (Na+) move into the cell and potassium ions (K+) move out of the cell. For a split second, this causes the inside of the cell to become positive and the outside of the cell to become negative.

What is depolarization?

500

This part of the brain is used to regulate the blood pressure, heart rate, respiratory rate and other such life-sustaining activities.

What is the medulla oblongata?

500

These cells form the insulating myelin sheath around the neurons in the peripheral nervous system. 

What are schwann cells?

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