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Chapter 16

The Nervous System and Nervous Tissue

Organization of the Nervous System
Organization of the Nervous System
The nervous system is the primary control and communication center of the body. The nervous system can be divided into two major categories—the ...
Functional Divisions of the Nervous System
Functional Divisions of the Nervous System
The nervous system senses, integrates, and responds to various stimuli. Based on bodily control, the central nervous system cannot be divided ...
Functions of the Nervous System
Functions of the Nervous System
The nervous system has three main functions: sensation, integration, and motor output. Sensory functions detect and process stimuli from external and ...
Neurons: The Cell Body and the Dendrites
Neurons: The Cell Body and the Dendrites
Neurons, excitable nervous system cells, generally consist of three main parts: the cell body, the dendrites, and the axon. The cell body, also known as ...
Neurons: The Axon
Neurons: The Axon
The axon is a long, thin extended portion of the neuron that carries impulses from its cell body toward the effector cell. Axoplasm, the axon's ...
Nervous Tissue: Neuron Types
Nervous Tissue: Neuron Types
Neurons can be categorized either by their structure or their function. Structurally, neurons are classified by the number of processes emerging from the ...
Nervous Tissue: Glial Cells
Nervous Tissue: Glial Cells
Glial cells or neuroglia are non-neuronal cells in the nervous system that outnumber neurons. These include astrocytes, oligodendrocytes, microglia, and ...
Nervous Tissue: Myelin
Nervous Tissue: Myelin
Myelin is a protective, multilayered covering around axons, composed of lipids and proteins, that provides electrical insulation. In the PNS, individual ...
Electrochemical Gradient and Channel Proteins: An Overview
Electrochemical Gradient and Channel Proteins: An Overview
An electrochemical gradient is a fundamental concept in biology and chemistry. It regulates the movement of ions across cell membranes. This movement is ...
Ligand-gated Ion Channels
Ligand-gated Ion Channels
Ligand-gated ion channels are transmembrane proteins with a channel for ions to pass through and a binding site for a ligand. The channel opens only when ...
Voltage-gated Ion Channels
Voltage-gated Ion Channels
Voltage-gated ion channels are transmembrane proteins that open and close in response to changes in the membrane potential. They are present on the ...
Mechanically-gated Ion Channels
Mechanically-gated Ion Channels
Mechanically-gated ion channels are proteins found in eukaryotic and prokaryotic cell membranes that open in response to mechanical stress. Tension, ...
Resting Membrane Potential
Resting Membrane Potential
The relative difference in electrical charge, or voltage, between the inside and the outside of a cell membrane, is called the membrane potential. It is ...
Resting Potential Decay
Resting Potential Decay
The resting membrane potential of a neuron (-70mV) is sustained due to the selective ion permeability of the membrane. At the resting potential, the ...
Graded Potential
Graded Potential
The graded potential is a short-lived, localized change in the membrane potential of a neuron. A graded potential occurs in response to a stimulus, ...
Action Potential
Action Potential
Neurons communicate by firing action potentials—the electrochemical signal that is propagated along the axon. The signal results in the release of ...
Action Potential: Phases of Stimulation
Action Potential: Phases of Stimulation
An action potential has three main phases: depolarization, repolarization, and hyperpolarization. The depolarizing phase begins after a graded potential ...
Propagation of Action Potentials
Propagation of Action Potentials
The Propagation of an action potential is the process by which a nerve impulse is transmitted along the axon. It is a self-propagating process; once ...
Overview of Synapses
Overview of Synapses
Synapse is a region where communication occurs between two neurons or a neuron and its effector cell. The neuron that carries the impulse toward the ...
Chemical Synapses
Chemical Synapses
Chemical synapses are specialized sites between two neurons or between a neuron and a non-neuronal cell like a muscle, glandular or sensory cell. Because ...
Neurotransmitters
Neurotransmitters
Neurotransmitters play a crucial role in the communication between neurons in the autonomic nervous system. Neurons in the autonomic nervous system can be ...
Postsynaptic Potential (PSP)
Postsynaptic Potential (PSP)
Postsynaptic potential or PSP refers to a change in the electrical potential of a postsynaptic membrane when neurotransmitters released by presynaptic ...
Integration of Synaptic Events
Integration of Synaptic Events
The integration of synaptic events involves the summation of multiple graded potentials, such as excitatory and inhibitory postsynaptic potentials, at the ...
Neural Circuits
Neural Circuits
In the central nervous system, billions of interconnected neurons are organized into specialized functional groups called neuronal pools. Within each ...
Neurogenesis and Regeneration of Nervous Tissue
Neurogenesis and Regeneration of Nervous Tissue
In the CNS, neurogenesis, the birth of new neurons from stem cells, is limited to the hippocampus in adults. In other regions of the brain and spinal ...
Disorders of the Nervous Tissue
Disorders of the Nervous Tissue
Nervous tissue disorders are caused by several factors. Homeostatic imbalances include cerebral hypoxia  — or reduced oxygen supply to the ...
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