Referat Nervous System
Mai jos puteti citi fragmente din
Referat Nervous System si de asemenea puteti face
Download Referat Nervous systemCiteste fragmente din Referat Nervous System
Nervous System
Central nervous system
The brain and spinal cord comprise the central nervous system. The
vertebrate brain is divided into three main sections: the fore-, mid-
and hind-brains. Invertebrate brains are different, and in segmented
animals, large ganglia may be largely responsible for the actions of the
segment in which they reside, the brain being merely the large ganglion
at the head end of the animal.
The hind-brain is evolutionarily the oldest of the vertebrate brain
structures, and consists (from the back forwards) of the medulla
oblongata (the site of cardiac control), the pons (breathing control),
and the cerebellum, two paired hemispheres controlling proprioception,
balance and coordination. The midbrain (mostly consisting of the tectum)
was originally responsible for sight, but this has been subverted in
vertebrates. The hind and mid-brains are collectively termed the
brainstem.
The forebrain consists of the thalamus (principally wiring), the pineal
gland (involved in sleep responses and circadian rhythms), the
hypothalamus (involved in homoeostasis, via its effects on psychological
drives, neurosecretion and releasing factors aimed at the pituitary and
control of autonomic nerves) and the pituitary, the master endocrine
gland. The hypothalamus, pituitary, and other parts (e.g. the
hippocampus) are collectively termed the limbic system and are the seat
of drives such as thirst, hunger, libido and aggression.
The front most section of the brain is the cortex, primitively an
olfactory centre, but in vertebrates, subverted to receive other sensory
inputs (sight, hearing), generate motor outputs (including speech) and
is responsible for thought in general. The cortex consists of two
hemispheres, which in humans are massively expanded, deeply furrowed
with sulci, and hide most of the underlying structures. Many areas have
been identified with particular functions, such as Warnicke s and
Broca s areas, involved in speech. There is heavy bias between the
hemispheres in humans in that the right is involved in analytical,
mathematical and such functions, whilst the left is involved in speech,
sensory synthesis, etc. The retina of the eye is also technically a part
of the brain, and is the only part of the brain visible without hacking
someone s head open :)
The whole brain and spinal cord consist of canals and ventricles
containing cerebrospinal fluid, surrounded by a core of grey matter
(neurone bodies), surrounded by white matter (axon wiring ), surrounded
by meninges. The meninges consist of a soft inner layer, the pia mater,
a spongy middle layer, the arachnoid, and a tough outer layer, the dura
mater. In the cortex, the grey matter unusually grows out over the white
matter.
Peripheral nervous system and neurones
There are many sorts of nerve: reflex arcs through the spinal cord serve
to connect stimuli from afferent nerves thru intermediary neurones with
rapid motor responses via efferent nerves. The autonomic nervous system
controls involuntary physiological changes: the sympathetic system
serves to stimulate (it uses adrenaline as a neurotransmitter), the
parasympathetic system inhibits via acetylcholine. Higher level
voluntary actions involve intermediate neurones of the cortex.
Nerve cells (neurons or neurones) generally consist of short afferent
dendrites, a cell body, and an efferent axon, which may be microns to
metres in length. The axon may be insulated by fatty myelin sheaths,
formed by the wrapping of Schwann cells around the axon. In the brain,
other cells are present besides neurones; these include astrocytes
( glue ), oligodendrocytes (insulation, similar to Schwann cells),
microglia (immune cells), and ependema ( tiling ).
The transmission of information by neurones is both electrical and
chemical. The electrical transmission occurs via changes in membrane
potential: in the resting state; sodium and potassium pumps maintain a
potential across the membrane (positive on the outside). When a dendrite
is stimulated by a neurotransmitter (see below), ligand gated Na and K
channels open in the dendrite, causing an influx of Na and an efflux of
K. This causes depolarisation of the membrane (it becomes negative on
the outside). The change in potential opens voltage gated Na and K
channels, which serve to propagate the change across the neurone
surface. In myelinated neurones, the voltage change jumps along the
axon via discontinuities in the myelin sheath (nodes of Ranvier). After
this action potential passes, the neurone restores its resting
potential, usually entering a refractory period, during which it is
insensitive to further stimulation. Hyperpolarisation also occurs. The
action potential is an all or nothing event: increased intensity of
stimulation causes an increase in the rate of neurone firing, rather
than in the amplitude of the change in membrane potential.
At synapses, junctions between nerve cells, neurotransmission is
achieved by the diffusion of chemical neurotransmitters. Action
potentials cause vesicles of neurotransmitter in the axon knob to dump
their contents into the synaptic space, where they diffuse to ligand
gated ion channels on the body or dendrites of the recipient neurone.
Neurotransmitters are removed by active uptake or degradation. Some of
the more important neurotransmitters are...
Acetylcholine (ACh). This is involved in neuromuscular junctions and the
parasympathetic nervous system. In the parasympathetic nervous system,
two receptors are identified. These are muscarinic junctions (the
alkaloid muscarine mimics ACh; this effect is blocked by atropine),
which are responsible for responses such as depression of heart-rate,
and nicotinic junctions (nicotine mimics, curare inhibits), which are
exploited during surgery: curare allows patients to be paralysed,
without adversely affecting the heart. ACh is destroyed by ACh esterase,
which is HYPERLINK
"http://www.steve.gb.com/science/reaction_mechanisms.html" l "esters"
inhibited by Sarin, Tabun and organophosphates , hence their use as
pesticides and nerve gases.
Gamma-aminobutyrate (GABA). GABA receptors are generally inhibitory ,
benzodiazepines and barbiturates make GABA receptors hypersensitive,
hence their use as tranquillisers. GABA and the gaseous transmitter
nitric oxide (NO) interact, and the use of nitroglycerine/amyl nitrite
in producing vasodilation for angina treatment is due to this.
Serotonin. The happy neurotransmitter: Prozac prevents the reuptake of
this chemical from synapses, ecstasy (MDMA), causes massive
oversecretion, and LSD and mescaline mimic its effects.
       ÂÂ
Psilocybin, LSD and Prozac act at serotonin synapses. HYPERLINK
"http://www.steve.gb.com/cgi-bin/image.cgi?molecule=alkaloids%2fpsilocyb
in.jpg" [psilocybin non chime version]    HYPERLINK
"http://www.steve.gb.com/cgi-bin/image.cgi?molecule=alkaloids%2fLSD.jpg"
[LSD non chime version]    HYPERLINK
"http://www.steve.gb.com/cgi-bin/image.cgi?molecule=halogen_compounds%2f
fluoxetine_(Prozac).jpg" [Prozac non chime version]   ÂÂ
Adrenaline (epinephrine) and noradrenaline (norepinephrine). Involved in
the sympathetic nervous system, which has much the same effects on the
body as adrenaline itself (sweating, increased heart rate, bowel
voiding, etc.).
Anandamine. The putative neurotransmitter involved in cannabinoid
intoxication.
Tetrahydrocannabinol acts at anandamine receptors. HYPERLINK
"http://www.steve.gb.com/cgi-bin/image.cgi?molecule=alcohols%2ftetrahydr
ocannabinol.jpg" [non chime version]
Nitric oxide (NO). A short lived (strangely stable free radical)
recently found to be involved in a large number of physiological
responses, not least in (penile/clitoral) erection.
Dopamine. Involved in muscular coordination, the use of its precursor
L-dopa in the treatment of Parkinson s (and the associated dyskinesia)
is well know, if not well understood. Acetylcholine, dopamine,
serotonin, adrenaline, tyramine and a number of other transmitters are
all monoamines, i.e. aminoacids less the acid group. Some of these
transmitters are also involved in neuromodulation and immune responses (
e.g. histamine). Other aminoacids are also important in insect and
vertebrate neurotransmission, e.g. glutamic acid and glycine.
   ÂÂ
MDMA (Ecstasy) and cocaine act at dopamine synapses. MDMA also acts at
serotonin receptors. HYPERLINK
"http://www.steve.gb.com/cgi-bin/image.cgi?molecule=alkaloids%2fcocaine.
jpg" [cocaine non chime version]    HYPERLINK
"http://www.steve.gb.com/cgi-bin/image.cgi?molecule=alkaloids%2fEcstasy.
jpg" [Ecstasy non chime version]
Peptides. By far the largest group, these mini-proteins are less well
known than their smaller cousins. Enkephalins and endorphins modulate
pain responses in the brain (morphine and other opiates mimic these
chemicals), releasing factors (local hormones) secreted by the
hypothalamus cause the pituitary gland to secrete other true hormones,
and other neuropeptides may interact with the immune system.
Emergent properties
All this understanding of the brain and its effects on the body have led
to some understanding of the brains emergent properties: those you
wouldn t expect a priori from a few kilos of grey sparky sludge. Such
properties include memory, which is probably due to the reinforcement of
some synaptic connections at the expense of others, imagination,
cultural transmission, the illusion of free-will, self-awareness and
consciousness. Some insight into these properties may be given by
certain forms of selective brain damage (including that caused
purposively by doctors in treatment of epilepsy), but the study of
consciousness is not easy, not least because it is extremely difficult
to define it!
ì¥Â@