Chapter 11
Chapters 12 and 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 16
100

Where (in relation to the cell) are sodium levels high and potassium levels high?

sodium outside, potassium inside 

100

What are the main characteristics of each meninge of the spinal cord? 

Dura mater is the tough, outermost layer. Arachnoid mater looks like a spider web, middle layer. Pia mater is innermost, tightly bound to the brain and spinal cord.

100

Explain the difference between the Wernicke’s and Broca’s area.

Wernicke’s is sensory, so understanding what someone is saying and thinking of your response. Broca’s is motor, which sends information to the muscles that actually make you talk.

100

Describe the location and functions of the enteric nervous system.

nerve plexuses within walls of the digestive tract. Involved in smooth muscle contraction, gland secretions, and detects changes in the content of the lumen. 

200

Explain the differences of the somatic and autonomic nervous system.

Somatic is voluntary and outputs to skeletal muscles. Autonomic is involuntary and outputs to smooth and cardiac muscle.

200

What does the vagus nerve do?

parasympathetic control of the heart and GI tract.

200

Define the pacinian corpuscle and meissner corpuscle.

Pacinian is deep cutaneous pressure, vibration, and proprioception. Meissner is two-point discrimination. 

200

Define cholinergic and adrenergic receptors and give an example of each.

Cholinergic are receptors for Acetylcholine and an example would be nicotinic or muscarinic. Adrenergic are receptors for epinephrine and norepinephrine, an example would be alpha and beta.

300

What are the 3 interconnected functions of the nervous system?

sensory input receptors receive stimuli, integrating centers process the stimuli, and motor output (effectors) cause a response.

300

What does the facial nerve do?

blinking, facial expressions

300

Compare mechanoreceptors and nociceptors.

Mechanoreceptors are compression, bending, and stretching of the cell. Nociceptors are extreme mechanical, thermal, and chemical stimuli.

400

Compare the sympathetic and parasympathetic divisions.

The sympathetic is fight or flight, it mobilizes the body systems during activity. The parasympathetic is rest and digest, it conserves energy and functions at rest.

400

What does the trigeminal nerve do?

facial innervation, biting, chewing, and swallowing

400

Describe the cause of Parkinson’s disease and the treatment.

Parkinson’s is caused by the inhibition of the motor drive. It is treated with medicine that enhances dopamine production.

500

List the 4 steps that occur in an action potential

  1. resting membrane potential

  2. Depolarization- sodium channels open

  3. Repolarization- potassium channels open and sodium channels close

  4. Hyperpolarization-membrane stays hyperpolarized until potassium channels close





500

Explain the steps of a reflex arc.

1) sensory receptors feel a stimulus, 2) Action potential moves through the dorsal root to the spinal cord, 3) Sensory neuron synapses with an interneuron in the spinal cord, 4) interneuron synapses with motor neuron, 5) action potential goes through the ventral root to an effector organ 

500

What are the 4 things responsible for voluntary motor movement?

Cerebral motor, basal nuclei, thalamus, and cerebellum.