Structural nervous system
Functional nervous system
CNS
brain and spinal cord
PNS
cranial and spinal nerves that carry impulses twoard CNS (afferent and away from the CNS (efferent) to target organs or skeletal muscles
Somatic nervous system
ANS
motor and sensory involuntary control of organ systems
Nervous tissue?
Neuron
Neuroglial cells
Nerve injury in peripheral and CNS neurons
Synapse
Nerve impulse predominantly regulated by
Brain consists of (3)?
Forebrain
Midbrain
Hindbrain
Spinal cord
ascending tracts found in all columns (sensory)
descending tracts (motor) found in lateral and anterior columns
reflex arcs are completed in spinal cord and influenced by higher centers
Major motor tracts
Major sensory pathways
Posterior column
* carries fine touch (2 pt discrimination), vibration, and proprioceptive information – self-movement, force, and body position (epicritic information)
* 3-neuron chain
spinothalamic tract (anterior and lateral)
* vague touch and pian, including temperature perception
* 3-neuron chain?
* protopathic - relating to a sensory nerve that perceives only coarse stimuli, such as pain
spinocerebellar tract
* somatosensory part of the sensory nervous system that relays unconscious proprioceptive information from the lower limbs and trunk of the body to the cerebellum
CNS protected by?
Circle of willis
Blood supply to spinal cord
blood-brain barrier
PNS function
relays info from CNS to muscle and effector organs through cranial and spinal nerve tracts arranged in fasicles bound together to form peripheral nerve