What are the 3 functions of the nervous system?
1) SENSORY INPUT: collection of stimuli
2) INTEGRATION: interpretation of the sensory information and decide response
3) MOTOR OUTPUT: activation of effector organs (muscles and glands) to produce a response
What type of neuron fulfills each of the three functions of the nervous system?
Sensory neurons receive stimuli
Interneurons (association neurons) interpret and decide
Motor neurons produce response
What are the 2 main divisions of the nervous system?
CNS = brain and spinal cord (integration and command)
PNS = paired spinal and cranial nerves that carry messages to and from the CNS
What are the 2 functional divisions of the PNS?
SENSORY (afferent) division
MOTOR (efferent) division
What are the 2 subdivisions under the sensory (afferent) division of the PNS?
somatic afferent fibers carry info away from skin, skeletal muscles, and joints
visceral afferent fibers carry info from visceral organs
What are the 2 subdivisions under the motor (efferent) division of the PNS?
Somatic (voluntary) nervous system:
- conscious control of skeletal muscles
Autonomic (involuntary) nervous system (ANS)
What are the two subdivisions of the ANS (autonomic (involuntary) nervous system)?
Sympathetic
Parasympathetic
What are the two major cell types of the nervous tissue?
NEURONS: excitable cells that carry info by transmitting electrical signals
NEUROGLIAL (accessory) cells that assist neurons
What are the 4 kinds of neuroglial cells in the CNS?
ASTROCYTES
MICROGLIA
EPENDYMAL cells
OLIGODENDROCYTES
What are astrocytes and what is there function?
They are the most abundant cell, they are star shaped and highly branched
What do microglia look like and what do they do?
Small ovoid cells with thorny processes
What do ependymal cells look like and what do they do?
range in shape from squamous to columnar
What do oligodendrocytes look like and what do they do?
large branched cells
What are the 2 types of neuroglial cells in the PNS?
SATELLITE CELLS
SCHWANN CELLS
What do satellite cells do?
What do schwann cells do?
smaller than oligodendrocytes
What are the 5 special characteristics for neurons?
1) long lived (100 yrs plus)
2) amitotic (don’t divide, with a few exceptions)
3) high metabolic rate (depends on continuous supply of oxygen and glucose b/c it can’t store its own)
4) irritable - respond to stimuli
5) plasma membrane functions in electrical signaling
What are the two other names for the cell body of a neuron?
perikaryon or soma
What organelles do neurons lack?
centrioles (do not divide)
What is the rough ER of a neuron called? what is significant about this feature?
Nissl bodies:
What is a cluster of cell bodies in the CNS called?
Nucleus
What is a cluster of cell bodies in the PNS called?
Ganglion
What are the two types of neural appendages?
dendrites - receive input
axon - the cells output
How many axons are there per neuron?
1