Brain
Spinal Cord
Nerves
Cranial Nerves
Random
100

What is the largest part of the brain?

What is the cerebrum.

100

The spinal cord is continuous with the brainstem and exits from the cranial cavity through the

What is the foramen magnum
100

Spinal Nerves and Cranial Nerves are located

Where is Peripheral Nervous System

100

What is the eye's sensory nerve?

What is the optic nerve (I)

100

This is the physiologic barrier between blood capillaries and brain tissue?

What is the blood-brain barrier.

This barrier protects the brain from harmful agents, while allowing nutrients and gasses to enter.

The blood brain barrier affects drug penetration. Only some drugs can enter the CNS from the blood stream.

200

What is the primary functional unit of the nervous system?

What is the Neuron.

Cell body (nucleus, cytoplasm city), Axon (carries nerve impulses-hwy) and dendrites (links to other neurons). 

3 Characteristics: 1) Excitability (generate), 2) Conductivity (transmit), 3) Ability to influence other neurons, muscle cells, or glandular cells.


200

Protects the spinal cord, supports the head, and provides flexibility

What is the Vertebral column.

33 individual vertebrae

- 7 cervical, 12 thoracic, 5 lumbar, 5 sacral (fused into 1), and 4 coccygeal (fused into 1).

Each vertebra has a central opening through which the spinal cord passes. 

200

Involves Involuntary Responses to Internal Stimuli

What is Autonomic Nervous System. 

Divided into the Sympathetic (SNS) and Parasympathetic (PNS)

The ANS governs involuntary functions of heart muscle, smooth muscle, and glands.


200

What are the three nerves that move the eyeball?

What are the oculomotor (III), the trochlear (IV), and the abducens (VI)?

200

What protects the brain from external trauma. It is composed of 8 cranial bones and 14 facial bones. 

What is the skull.

300

Three parts of the Brain Stem

What is Midbrain, Pons, Medulla Oblongata.


300

An involuntary response to stimuli.

What is a reflex. 

Components to this are Receptor organ, Afferent sensory neuron, Effector motor neuron, and effector organ (skeletal muscle). Ex patellar reflex. 


300
Carries impulse from skin, skeletal muscles, and joints to the brain
What are Sensory Neurons
300

What is the sensory nerve of the face and head?

What is the trigeminal nerve (V)?

300

The sense of touch is part of which division of the nervous system

What is Peripheral Nervous System (PNS)

400

This lobe helps with auditory data and contains Wernicke's area

What is the Temporal lobe. 

400

Controls vomiting, cardiac function, respiration

What is Medulla Oblongata

400

What is the area of skin innervated by the sensory fibers of a single dorsal root of a spinal nerve?

What is a dermatome

400

What is the nerve that allows you to "smell the roses"?

What is the olfactory nerve (I)?

400
A bruise to the brain
What is a Concussion
500

The cerebrum is composed of what 4 lobes?

What are Frontal, Temporal, Parietal, Occipital.

500

Communication of the Peripheral Nervous System is by way of

What is the Spinal Cord

500

What system plays a role with a "Fight or Flight" response

What is Sympathetic Nervous System (SNS)

500

What are the three nerves needed for tongue movement, for speech or swallowing?

What are the glossopharyngeal (IX), spinal accessory (XI) and hypoglossal (XII) nerves?

500

The 3 protective membranes that surround the brain and spinal cord

What is the Dura mater, Arachnoid layer, and Pia mater. 

Dura mater: outermost layer

Arachnoid layer: fragile, web like membrane that lies btwn the dura mater and pia mater. 

Pia mater: Vascular innermost layer of the meninges.