Clinical and SLP relevance
Neurons and Neural Structures
Glial cells
Neurotransmission
Neurochemistry
100

Percentage of the U.S. population affected by neurological disorders.

What is 20%?

100

This part of a neuron differs in diameter and length, is typically myelinated, and is present in every neuron.

What is an axon?

100

These glial cells create myelin in the central nervous system.

What are oligodendroglia?

100

This is the resting charge of a neuron, in millivolts.

What is -70 mV?

100

This is the primary excitatory neurotransmitter in the central nervous system.

What is glutamate?

200

This type of disorder affects 15 million people with neurological conditions.

 What are communicative cognitive disorders (developmental or acquired)?

200

This region of a neuron determines whether an action potential will be generated.

What is the axon hillock?

200

These glial cells form the blood-brain barrier and regulate neuronal metabolism.

What are astrocytes?

200

This occurs when sodium channels open and the voltage reaches -55 mV.

What is depolarization?

200

This neurotransmitter is the main inhibitory regulator of muscle tone.

What is GABA (Gamma-aminobutyric acid)?

300

The professionals who assist with neurolinguistic assessments and mental process disorders

Who are Speech-Language Pathologists (SLPs)?

300

This type of neuron connects sensory and motor neurons within the CNS.

What is an interneuron?

300

These glial cells line the brain's ventricles and help secrete cerebrospinal fluid.

What are ependymal cells?

300

After an action potential, this process involves potassium ion channels opening.

What is repolarization?

300

This neurotransmitter is involved in movement, learning, attention, and reward.

What is dopamine?

400

This disease is associated with dopamine degeneration in the substantia nigra.

What is Parkinson’s disease?

400

This is the tiny gap between the axon terminal of one neuron and the dendrite of another.

What is the synaptic cleft?

400

These tiny glial cells act like macrophages, cleaning up damaged cells in the CNS.

What are microglia?

400

These bind to receptors on a postsynaptic cell to pass on a signal.

What are neurotransmitters?

400

Dopamine originates in these two brain regions.

What are the substantia nigra and ventral tegmental area?

500

This disease is associated with a deficiency in cholinergic production in the hippocampus.

What is Alzheimer’s disease?

500

These are the afferent neurons that carry sensory information to the central nervous system.

What are sensory neurons?

500

These glial cells myelinate nerve fibers in the peripheral nervous system.

What are Schwann cells?

500

This type of post-synaptic potential increases the likelihood of a neuron firing.

What is an excitatory post-synaptic potential (EPSP)?

500

This is the only neurotransmitter responsible for skeletal muscle control in the PNS.

What is acetylcholine?

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