Lecture 01 Introduction to the Nervous System

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534 Neuroanatomy (Lecture Slides) Slides sobre Lecture 01 Introduction to the Nervous System, criado por Mia Li em 26-08-2017.
Mia Li
Slides por Mia Li, atualizado more than 1 year ago
Mia Li
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Resumo de Recurso

Slide 1

Slide 2

    CNS v.s. PNS
    CNS = neuron + glia All components of CNS stay within the brain or spinal cord CNS neurons only synapse with neurons. CNS = forebrain + brainstem + cerebellum + spinal cord CNS is in charge of analysis and integration
    PNS = neuron and glia PNS neurons interact with the environment/non-neurons e.g.: sensory and motor neuron PNS = Somatic nervous system + Autonomic nervous system Somatic = sensory nerves and ganglia + motor nerves Autonomic = viscera + sympathetic + parasympathetic

Slide 3

    Embryonic origins
    Order of embryonic development: neurotube becomes CNS 3 vesicle stage prosencephalon (forebrain) Mesencephalon (midbrain) Rhombencephalon (hindbrain) 5 vesicle stage Telencephalon (cerebral hemisphere) Diencephalon (thalamus and hypothalamus) Mesencephalon (midbrain) Metencephalon (pons + cerebellum) Myelencephalon (medulla) Abnormally: Spina Bifida (improper closure)

Slide 4

    Development of the neural axes
    Draw the outline of the development of neural axes at the 3 vesicle stage 3 axes in total (cephalic flexure and cervical flexure) cephalic flexure is between mesencephalon and rhombencephalon cervical flexure is between rhombencephalon and SC cervical flexure resolves at the 5 vesicle stage cephalic flexure migrates between diencephalon and mesencephalon Axes of orientation Rostral v.s. caudal Dorsal v.s. ventral

Slide 5

    Classification of the neurons
    By morphology (how many extensions directly off of the cell body?) Unipolar (body + axon) Pseudo-unipolar (distal axon + body + proximal axon) Bipolar (dendrite + body + axon) Mutipolar (dendrites + body + axon) Functional zones of a neuron Input zone Integrative zone Conducting zone insulation, AP regeneration Transmitting zone Transmitter release, transmitter uptake

Slide 6

    Classification of synapses
    Presynaptic and postsynaptic membrane Axodendritic synapse Axosomatic synapse Axoaxonic synapse Somosomatic synapse Dendrodendritic synapse
    Functional classification Chemical synapse Electrical synapse

Slide 7

    Classification by pharmacology
    Glutamate - glutamatergic GABA - GABAergic Acetycholine - dopaminergic Dopamine - dopaminergic Glycin - glycerinergic Serotonin - serotonergic Norepinephrine - noradrenergic Histamin - histaminergic What are the qualifications to be a neurotransmitter?  NT must be made by the presynaptic neuron Ca2+ must be required for release of NT Post synaptic membrane must have the receptor to bind with the NT  

Slide 8

    Glia cells
    CNS cells Astrocytes (support, BBB, secretion) Oligodendrocytes (myelin sheath) Ependymal cells (barriers between compartments) Microglia cells (immune cells) PNS cells Schwann cells (Myelin formation) Satellite cells (support)

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