Ch. 12 Nervous System
Brain and Cranial Nerves
Spinal Cord and Nerves
Autonomic Nervous System
Clinical Applications
100

The electrical signal that is propagated down an axon is called

action potential

100

What part of the brain is responsible for personality and decision-making?

Frontal Lobe

100

Where is cerebrospinal fluid located?

Subarachnoid Space

100

Where are muscarinic receptors located?

On parasympathetic effectors and most sweat glands

100

This is a disorder where part of the brain is missing and it doesn't fully develop

Anencephaly

200

What is it called when a neuron is repolarized past its resting membrane potential?

Hyperpolarization

200

What are the layers of meninges in order from superficial to deep?

Dura Mater, Arachnoid Mater, Pia Mater

200

How is white matter organized in the spinal cord?

Into anterior, posterior, and lateral funiculi.

200

What do we call a neuron that releases norepinephrine?

Adrenergic

200

This enhances our perception of pain

Substance P

300

What cell myelinates axons in the PNS

Schwann cell/Neurolymmocyte

300

What are Association tracts?

myelinated axons, white matter, within the same hemisphere

300

How many cervical spinal nerves are there?

8 pairs

300

Where are parasympathetic autonomic ganglia located?

Near or in the target organ, effector

300

What is the action of the normal plantar reflex for a child under 1 year?

big toe dorsiflexes due to incomplete myelination

400

What cell in the PNS regulates material exchange between neurons and extracellular fluid?

Satellite Cells

400

What nerve functions in swallowing?

CN 9, Glossopharyngeal

400

What is the function of the lateral corticospinal tract?

controls skilled movements of limbs, hands, and feet

400

What is the divergence pattern in the sympathetic division?

Activates 20+ neurons (mass activation)

400

What is a stretch reflex?

feedback mechanism to control muscle length by causing muscle contraction

500

change in membrane potential where the inside of neuron becomes more positive/less negative but doesn't reach threshold

Small EPSP 

500

What nerve functions in the movement of the tongue?

Hypoglossal

500

What is the role of the corticobulbar tract?

controls movements eyes, tongue, chewing, facial expressions, and speech

500

What happens when acetylcholine binds to nicotinic receptors?

causes excitation of the post-synaptic cell

500

What is a TIA?

Transient Ischemic Attack, Episode of temporary cerebral dysfunction (mini-stroke), Cause- Temporary impaired blood flow to the brain