1 / 9

The Nerve Impulse

The Nerve Impulse. Voltage is the measure of the electrical potential difference between 2 points. The 2 points of the neuron refer to the inside of the axon and the outside of the axon. Resting Potential.

wilma
Télécharger la présentation

The Nerve Impulse

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Nerve Impulse Voltage is the measure of the electrical potential difference between 2 points. The 2 points of the neuron refer to the inside of the axon and the outside of the axon.

  2. Resting Potential • When the axon is NOT conducting an impulse, the inside of the axon is negative compared to the outside, -65 mV. • The concentration of Na+ is greater outside the axon and the concentration of K+ is greater inside the axon. • The unequal distribution of these ions creates this resting potential of – 65 mV. • The sodium-potassium pump, an integral membrane protein, actively transports Na+ out and K+ into the axon to maintain this unequal distribution. • The pump is always working because the membrane ion channels are somewhat permeable to these ions and are continually diffusing down their concentration gradients. • The membrane is more permeable to K+ than Na+, creating more positive ions outside the axon. Additional negatively charged organic ions inside the axon helps combine to create the resting potential.

  3. Motor Neuron Axon – resting potential of -65mV.

  4. Integral Membrane Proteins

  5. Action Potential • A rapid change in polarity across an axon membrane as the nerve impulse occurs. -65mV to +40 mV to -65 mV. • All- or -none phenomenon. • If a stimulus reaches the threshold, -40 mV, an action potential occurs.

  6. Action Potential • Depolarization - sodium gates open, Na+ flow down concentration gradient and enter the axon. • The membrane potential changes from -65 mV to +40 mV. • Repolarization – potassium gates open, K+ flow down concentration gradient and exit the axon. • The membrane potential changes from +40 mV back to -65mV. • This occurs in 2 ms!

  7. Myelinatedvs Non-myelinated • Myelinated axons conduct the impulse more quickly as the impulse jumps from node of Ranvier to nodeRanvier. • The action potential can travel up to 200 m/s! (450mph) • Nonmyelinated axons, carry the action potential down the axon one small section at a time. • As soon as the action potential has moved on the previous axon section undergoes a refractory period.

  8. Refractory Period • The sodium gates are unable to open. • The nerve impulse cannot conduct backwards. • This makes the action potential always move toward the axon terminals – the axon bulbs.

More Related