Neurons
Divisions of System & Neurotransmitters
Neuroglial Cells
Action Potential
The Brain!
100

The short, highly branched processes extending from the cell body that receive incoming signals.

What is a dendrite?

100

This division consists of the brain and the spinal cord.

What is the Central Nervous System?

100

These star-shaped neuroglial cells form the blood-brain barrier and regulate the chemical environment in the CNS.

What are Astrocytes?

100

The charge of the inside of an axon of a neuron at resting potential.

What is negative?

100

The part of the brainstem that is essential for controlling heart rate, blood pressure, and breathing rate.

What is the medulla oblongata? 

200

This fatty, insulated covering on an axon is created by a Schwann cell in the PNS and speeds up impulse transmission.

What is the myelin sheath?

200

The division of the Peripheral Nervous System responsible for controlling voluntary movements of skeletal muscles.

What is the Somatic Nervous System?

200

The neuroglial cell that acts as the primary immune defense, phagocytizing pathogens and debris in the CNS.

What are microglia?

200

The minimum electrical charge required to open the voltage-gated channels and initiate an action potential.

What is -55mV (threshold)?

200

Of the four main structures, this is the second largest structure of the brain, located at the back of the head, primarily responsible for coordination and balance.

What is the cerebellum?

300

This structural type of neuron is extremely rare and only found in the special sense organs.

What is a bipolar neuron?

300

This inhibitory neurotransmitter's effects are mimicked or enhanced by alcohol.

What is GABA?

300

These are the neuroglia in the PNS?

What are satellite and Schwann cells?

300

This event, caused by the influx of sodium ions, results in the inside of the cell membrane becoming positive.

What is depolarization?

300

This large tract of white matter allows the left and right cerebral hemispheres to communicate with each other.

What is the corpus callosum?

400

Neurons' different structural names and their meanings.

What are Multipolar, Bipolar, and Unipolar (Pseudounipolar)?

They mean a different amount of ends coming off of the cell body.

400

The division of the Autonomic Nervous System that is responsible for mobilizing the body during stress or emergencies, increasing heart rate and respiration.

What is the sympathetic nervous system?

400

These are the neuroglia in the CNS.

What are Astrocytes, Oligodendrocytes, Microglia, and Ependymal Cells?

400

This helps the cell get back to resting potential using a ratio. 

What is the sodium/potassium pump? For every 3 sodium ions out of the cell there will be 2 potassium ions into the cell.
400

This main region of the diencephalon is the body's chief integration center for the autonomic nervous system, regulating hunger, thirst, and body temperature.

It is inferior to the ______________.

What is the hypothalamus? Inferior to the thalamus.

500

The functional type of neuron that sends signals away from the CNS to an effector like a muscle or gland. (Two names)

What is a motor (efferent) neuron?

500

SSRIs are used to treat depression because they do this... 

SSRIs (Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors) block serotonin from being taken back into the presynaptic terminal so that the serotonin binds more to the receptors on the post-synpatic neuron.

500

There are two neuroglial cells in the PNS, satellite cells and schwann cells. These two neuroglial cells do similar jobs in the CNS.

What are Astrocytes and Oligodendrocytes?

500

This is what is going on in the cell during the repolarization step and the charge of the cell.

During this step Sodium channels close and potassium channels open. The inside of the cell is becoming more negative as the potassium ions rush out of the cell through voltage-gated potassium channels. Potassium will reach equilibrium during this step, but Potassium channels will stay open longer than needed resulting in hyperpolarization (lower than -70mV).

500

A stroke affecting this area might result in struggles forming speech but does not impact comprehension. (Name & Lobe)

What is Broca's area in the frontal lobe?