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IFA. What parts of the body is the Central Nervous System comprised of?. Anatomy of the Central Nervous System. New technology and advances in science have led to a better understanding of the relationship of the brain, biological basis of behavior, and mental disorders. Student Objective.

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  1. IFA What parts of the body is the Central Nervous System comprised of?

  2. Anatomy of the Central Nervous System • New technology and advances in science have led to a better understanding of the relationship of the brain, biological basis of behavior, and mental disorders

  3. Student Objective • I can identify parts and functions of the Central Nervous System (CNS)

  4. Cells of the Nervous System • The cells are known as Neurons. • Neurons- the basic building block of the nervous system that specialize in transmitting information throughout the body • Unusual shape • Nerve fibers extend from body cell (soma) • Dendrites- branched fibers that receive neural impulses • Axons- transmits neural messages from cell body towards another neuron

  5. Two principal divisions of the nervous system • Central Nervous System (CNS) • Peripheral Nervous System (PNS)

  6. Central Nervous System (CNS) • Brain and spinal cord • Serve as control center for entire organism • Integrated incoming information and determines appropriate responses

  7. Peripheral Nervous System • Made up of nerves outside of CNS • Acts a communication lines to and from CNS • Made up of sense organs- eyes, ears, taste buds, olfactory receptors, and touch receptors

  8. Mental Health Link • Understanding of mental disorders most often involves understanding the structure and function of the CNS

  9. IFA The picture above is a representation of what system of the body?

  10. Thin outer surface of the forbrain Largely made up of cell bodies which are gray Most highly evolved portion of the brain Cerebral Cortex

  11. Cerebrum Forebrain The largest most anterior part of the human brain Control motor activities and interprets sensations

  12. Lobes of the Cerebrum • Frontal • Temporal • Parietal • Occipital

  13. Frontal Lobe • Motor cortex-control skeletal muscles • Broca’s speech area-formation of words • Responsible for personality • Damage can cause a change in personality

  14. Temporal Lobe • Auditory area • Language memory and speech capacity • Damage can result in aphasia • Aphasia: partial or total inability to produce and understand speech as a a result of brain damage cause by injury or disease

  15. Parietal Lobe • Sensory association area- impulses from skin such as pain and temperature are interpreted • Area for estimation of distances, sizes, and shapes

  16. Occipital Lobe • Primary visual area • Trauma can result in blindness • Lesions can cause visual hallucinations

  17. IFA • The picture below is of the brain...what lobe of the brain is the area located and what is the area called?

  18. Pituitary Gland • Master Gland • Its secretions control timing and amount of hormone secretions by other endocrine glands • Thyroid • Adrenal Glands • Ovaries • Testes

  19. Cerebellum • Responsible for coordination of movements • Makes movements smooth • Helps maintain muscle tone • Helps maintain equilibrium

  20. Pons • Forms a bulge on anterior surface of brain stem • The link (bridge) that connects various parts of the brain Pons Visual

  21. Medulla Oblongata • Most anterior portion of the brain stem • Vital centers of medulla • Cardiac center: control heart rate • Vasomotor center: helps regulate blood pressure • Respiratory center: initiate and regulate breathing • Center for reflex actions: (vomiting, sneezzing, coughing, and swallowing)

  22. IFA • List the four centers of the Medulla Oblongata. Provide a description of each center.

  23. The Brain Part IINeurophysiology-Chemical Events at the Synapse • Each structure and each chemical produced and used by the brain has a specific function. Disease may cause alteration in the function of the brain. An understanding of the chemical events occurring at the synapse is fundamental to biological psychology. • Objective: • Student will identify the neurotransmitters and name disorders that can result when there is neurotransmitter dysfunction.

  24. Neurons • Nerve cells that make up the brain and peripheral nerves • Communicate with each other at the synapses • Synapse is a functional (not physical) contact between to neurons • About 100 billion neurons in human brain • Each neuron has about 10,00 synaptic contacts with other neurons.

  25. Parts of a Neuron • Cell body or soma • Contains the nucleus of the cell (DNA) • Soma constitutes “receiving” surface of the neuron • If the soma is damages, a neuron will not recover

  26. Parts of a Neuron • Dendrite • Multiple branches come off the coma • Branches receive nerve impulses from other neurons • Dendrite branching is influences by environment during development, both pre and post natal • The more branches, the more receiving sites for a neuron • Dendrites are few and sparsely branched in certain conditions such as Downs Syndrome and Fetal Alcohol Syndrome • Lab animals who have received stimulations as infants shoe more dendritic branching

  27. Axon • Single fiber that is thicker and longer than dendrites • Axon may have many branches at it end • Axons may be very short (1 micron) to very long (1 meter) depending on their destinations in the nervous system • Damaged neurons may show sprouting of new terminals to fill in spaces vacated by damaged axons • Mature neurons may not have an axon • Axon terminals in brain may be represented by these organizations

  28. Myelin Sheath • The lipid and protein sheath surrounding the axon • Purpose to insulate neuron • The more heavily mylinated the neuron the faster the electrical pulse can travel down the axon to other neurons • Multiple Sclerosis (MS) condition where the myelin of the brain and spinal cord degenerate • Nerve impulses unable to travel smoothly and efficiently

  29. The Synapse • A dynamic region between neurons consisting of: • Axon terminal (carries electrical impulses away from soma) • Synaptic cleft (a space between terminal axon and receiving neuron) • Dendrite (or adjacent neuron body) • REMEMBER that both SOMA and DENDRITES constitutes the RECEIVING surface of a neuron • Synapse Graphic

  30. Neurotransmitters: The Chemical Messengers • Chemicals (hormones) that are made in soma and stored in small synaptic vesicles (“packages”) at the tip of the axon • As electrical pulses travel from soma to axon, neurotransmitters are released into synapse • Neurotransmitters stick to receptors proteins in neighboring dendrite and trigger nerve impulse that travel down dendrite, across soma, down axon, etc. • Our behavior is consequence of millions of cells “talking” to each other via these electrochemical processes Neurotransmitter Graphic

  31. Inactivation of Neurotransmitters • The action of neurotransmitters can be stopped by four different mechanisms: • Diffusion: the neurotransmitter drifts away, out of the synaptic cleft where it can no longer act on a receptor. • Enzymatic degradation (deactivation): a specific enzyme changes the structure of the neurotransmitter so it is not recognized by the receptor. For example, acetylcholinesterase is the enzyme that breaks acetylcholine into choline and acetate. Neurotransmitter Graphic

  32. Inactivation of Neurotransmitters • Glial cells: astrocytes remove neurotransmitters from the synaptic cleft • Reuptake: the whole neurotransmitter molecule is taken back into the axon terminal that released it. This is a common way the action of norepinephrine, dopamine and serotonin is stopped...these neurotransmitters are removed from the synaptic cleft so they cannot bind to receptors

  33. Some of the Well Known Neurotransmitters • Acetylcholine (Ach) • Dopamine (DA) • Serotonin and Norepinephrine • Gamma Aminobutyric Acid (GABA)\ • Endorphines (“endegenous morphine)

  34. Acetylcholine (Ach) • Contributes to movement, learning, memory processes and REM sleep • Only transmitter between motor neurons and voluntary muscles • EXCESS: muscle paralysis or convulsions, sometimes death • DEFICIT: memory impairment (Alzheimer’s disease)

  35. Dopamine (DA) • Used by neurons control voluntary movement • Also used by neurons that are important for learning, attention, thought, and emotion • EXCESS: irrational thought, delusion, and/or hallucinations (Schizophrenia) • DEFICIT: tremors, muscular rigidity (Parkinson’s disease)

  36. Serotonin and Norepinephrine • Serotonin play prominent role in regulation of mood, sleep impulsivity, aggression, and appetite. • Norepinephrine plays role in eating, sleep, and mood • Lower level of activity in serotonin and norephinephrine is related to depression • DEFICIT serotonin: may lead to increased aggressive behavior and suicide • Some antidepressants drugs act to block reuptake of serotonin or norepinephrine

  37. IFA • What is the synapse composed of?

  38. Gamma-Aminobutyric Acid (GABA) • i. Appears to have inhibitory effects at synapses • ii. contributes to regulation of anxiety • iii. lower levels of activity related to anxiety • iv. antianxiety drugs (tranquilizers such as Valium) facilitate GABA synapses and thereby reduce anxiety • v. abnormality in GABA neurons may cause epilepsy

  39. Endorphins (“endogenous morphine”) • opiate-like substances produced in the body • provide relief from pain and produce feelings of pleasure and well-being • drugs such as opium, morphine, and heroin bind with receptors for endorphins • endorphins may explain “runners-high” experienced by long-distance runners

  40. Imaging of the Brain • I. Key Terms • A. neuro – root for brain and/or nervous system • B. imaging – procedure which records a picture or “image” of a body part • C. tome – Greek word that means “slice” sometimes referred to as a “cut” of body tissue • a. in neuroimaging, tome refers to cross-sectional images that demonstrate multiple “slices” of human anatomy • b. orientation of cross-sectional images depends on the body plane along which the image was recorded • D. –graphy – suffix that means a process of recording (an image)

  41. Imaging of the Brain • II. Body Planes – imaginary planes that pass through the body dividing it into sections; these planes provide the orientation for cross-sectional images in neuroimaging • A. transverse plane – imaginary plane that cuts across the body or body part and divides body or its part into upper and lower parts. • B. sagittal plane – imaginary plane that cuts the body into right and left sections • a. midsagittal plane (also called median plane) – imaginary plane that cuts body into equal right and left halves • C. coronal plane (also called frontal plane) – imaginary plane that divides the body or its parts into front and back sections

  42. Traditional Types of Neuroimaging • A. Skull Radiograph (takes about 5 to 10 minutes) • a. description: one-dimensional x-ray of skull • i. generally requires at least three separate x-ray images from different angles to better determine tissue abnormality • 1. image from the front (AP x-ray) • 2. image from the side (lateral x-ray) • 3. image with head turned 45 degrees (oblique x-ray)

  43. Skull Radiograph: Advantages/Disadvantages • b. advantages: • i. relative inexpensive • ii. fast • iii. demonstrates bony structures and fractures • c. disadvantages: • i. radiographic projections are one-dimensional and cannot accurately demonstrate depth and location of lesion • ii. does not image soft-tissue as well as bone

  44. Lateral Projection

  45. Traditional Types of Neuroimaging • Cerebral Angiography (takes about 60+ minutes) • a. description: traditional skull radiographs taken during injection of radiopaque contrast medium (“dye”) into the carotid arteries • i. visualization of blood flow via the carotid arteries to the brain • ii. helps diagnose patency of vessels, intracranial aneurysms, & tumor masses, which are shown by displacement of normal vessels

  46. Cerebral Angiography: Disadvantages/Advantages • disadvantage: • i. uses bolus of iodine-based dye for visualization of vessels • 1. may produce allergic reaction in some patients • 2. could dislodge vascular plaque and cause a stroke

  47. Cerebral Angiography

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